New York Intellect: A History of Intellectual Life in New York City, from 1750 to the Beginnings of Our Own TimeKnopf, 1987 - 422 Seiten A major social history of the intellectual life of New York City - the story of how, over three centuries, a minor colonial settlement became the capital of modern thought. From the eighteenth century on, New Yorkers have struggled to create new kinds of institutions, and new styles of thinking and writing, that would reflect the special character of their city, both its boundless energies and its deep divisions. Now Thomas Bender, Chairman of the Department of History at New York University, offers both an encompassing picture of the men and women who created the ideal of the New York intellectual."--Book Jacket. |
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Seite 74
... elite , that area of New York which included Barclay and Murray streets , Church Street and College Place , and Chambers Street west of Broadway . However , in the 1820s the elite left this downtown quarter near City Hall and moved ...
... elite , that area of New York which included Barclay and Murray streets , Church Street and College Place , and Chambers Street west of Broadway . However , in the 1820s the elite left this downtown quarter near City Hall and moved ...
Seite 77
... elite or subsidize equally the competing artisanal culture as well . As was often the case in Jacksonian America , the emergence of com- peting interests resulted in a policy of avoiding choice , of public with- drawal . The elite had ...
... elite or subsidize equally the competing artisanal culture as well . As was often the case in Jacksonian America , the emergence of com- peting interests resulted in a policy of avoiding choice , of public with- drawal . The elite had ...
Seite 289
... elite college , but not from all col- leges . 82 The simultaneous homogenization and nationalization of the student body of Columbia College was part of a more general development in which , as E. Digby Baltzell has shown , Eastern elite ...
... elite college , but not from all col- leges . 82 The simultaneous homogenization and nationalization of the student body of Columbia College was part of a more general development in which , as E. Digby Baltzell has shown , Eastern elite ...
Inhalt
The Emergence of City Culture in New York | 1 |
Patricians and Artisans | 46 |
A University of the City | 89 |
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Academy American artists associated Beard became become Boston Brace Brownell Bryant Butler century Charles city culture city's civic Civil Club Columbia College Columbia University critic Croly Curtis democracy Democratic Review Dewey discourse Duyckinck E. L. Godkin editor elite essay established Frederick Law Olmsted George Godkin Harvard Henry Herbert Croly History Howells Ibid ideal ideas immigrant important insisted institutions James John Journal Kirstein later learning lectures Letters literature Livingston magazine mechanics ment metropolis modern moral Morse New-York Historical Society organized Parke Godwin Partisan Review Philosophical Pintard political president Princeton professional public culture Putnam's Quoted Randolph Bourne reform represented Republic role Ruggles Samuel Samuel F. B. Morse School scientific Seth Low Social Science Street Tammany tion trustees University Press urban Verplanck Whitman William William Livingston Wilson writers wrote York City York Intellectuals York Society Library York University York's Yorkers
Verweise auf dieses Buch
The University and the City: From Medieval Origins to the Present Thomas Bender Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1988 |