دانلود کتاب The Fall of a Great American City: New York and the Urban Crisis of Affluence
by Kevin Baker
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عنوان فارسی: سقوط یک شهر بزرگ آمریکایی نیویورک و بحران شهری از فراوانی |
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Co-published with Harper's Magazine, where an earlier version of this essay was originally published in 2018.
The landlords are killing the town.
As New York City approaches the third decade of the twenty-first century, it is in imminent danger of becoming something it has never been before: unremarkable. By unremarkable I don’t just mean periodic, slump-in-the-art-world, all-the-bands-suck, cinema-is-dead boring. I mean flatlining. No longer a significant cultural entity but a blank white screen of mere existence. I mean The-World’s-Largest-Gated-Community-with-a-few-cupcake-shops. For the first-time in our history, creative-young-people-will-no-longer want-to-come-here boring.
Even, New-York-is-over boring. Or worse, New York is like everywhere else. Unremarkable.
This is not some new phenomenon, but a cancer that’s been metastasizing on the city for decades now. Even worse, it’s not something that anyone wants, except the landlords, and not even all of them. What’s happening to New York now—what’s already happened to most of Manhattan, its core, and what is happening in every American city of means, Boston, Washington, San Francisco, Seattle, you name it—is something that almost nobody wants, but everybody gets. As such, the current urban crisis exemplifies our wider crisis: an America where we believe that we no longer have any ability to control the systems we live under.