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Garth Andrew Myers' work makes a significant contribution to a long tradition of research on colonial cities and a multidisciplinary body of literature on urban legacies of colonialism. He examines both colonial rule and postcolonial inheritance in these cities, tracing the legacies of colonialism in different and divergent postcolonial settings—a revolutionary left-wing socialist state (Zanzibar) and a reactionary right-wing dictatorship (Malawi). In addition to the examination of urban plans and the African urban majority's responses to them, the book traces the experience of the urban planning process through three different "verandahs of power," or levels of class depiction: the colonial power, the colonized middle, and the urban majority. Interspersed with personal stories, this book illuminates our understanding of the workings of power in African cities by addressing human experiences of that power.
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1 released bookSpace, Place and Society is a 1-book series first released in 2003 with contributions by Garth Andrew Myers.
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Widely cited book with some valuable theoretical insights useful for spatial history but some chapters so padded with fluff it leaves too little empirical evidence to really allow its arguments to bite into. Assume challenges of sources are limiting factor.