<p>"A tour de force on the French suburbs and the utopian imaginaries that made them into the twentieth century's largest social experiment. <i>The Social Project</i> is a must-read for anyone interested in the ‘other Paris’ of the suburban periphery and a brilliant contribution to the urban and architectural history of the French suburbs and to understanding the social ambitions of architecture."—Rosemary Wakeman, Fordham University</p><p>"<i>The Social Project</i> does important work in uncovering and making available the complex projects, motives, dreams, and politics that made possible the vast expansion of urbanism in postwar France. It reminds us with force and insight that today’s despair and gloominess about such projects was not always the case nor were the current dreary outcomes inevitable."—Paul Rabinow, University of California, Berkeley</p>
<p>"A thorough history of the development of post-World War II mass housing in France."—<i>The Culture Machine</i></p>
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Om bidragsyterne
Kenny Cupers is assistant professor of architectural history at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is coauthor of Spaces of Uncertainty and editor of Use Matters: An Alternative History of Architecture.