City of Modernity. Łódź | Edited by Katarzyna Badowska, Tomasz Cieślak, Krystyna Pietrych, and Krystyna Radziszewska | ISBN 9783447393997

City of Modernity. Łódź

Edited by Katarzyna Badowska, Tomasz Cieślak, Krystyna Pietrych, and Krystyna Radziszewska

herausgegeben von Katarzyna Badowska, Tomasz Cieślak, Krystyna Pietrych und Krystyna Radziszewska
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonKatarzyna Badowska
Herausgegeben vonTomasz Cieślak
Herausgegeben vonKrystyna Pietrych
Herausgegeben vonKrystyna Radziszewska
Buchcover City of Modernity. Łódź  | EAN 9783447393997 | ISBN 3-447-39399-8 | ISBN 978-3-447-39399-7
Inhaltsverzeichnis

City of Modernity. Łódź

Edited by Katarzyna Badowska, Tomasz Cieślak, Krystyna Pietrych, and Krystyna Radziszewska

herausgegeben von Katarzyna Badowska, Tomasz Cieślak, Krystyna Pietrych und Krystyna Radziszewska
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonKatarzyna Badowska
Herausgegeben vonTomasz Cieślak
Herausgegeben vonKrystyna Pietrych
Herausgegeben vonKrystyna Radziszewska
City of Modernity consists of 33 essays about Łódź, a city that started out as an agricultural settlement and became a metropolis within a single generation, all thanks to technological progress. Its population of 767 in 1820, it had grown to 767,000 by 1939. At the turn of the century, it emblematized modernization and industrialization, and was a symbol of industrial-era modernity. It was often compared to Manchester and its truly American pace of development was admired. The city’s rapid economic career was impressive, but it also exacted a high social cost.
The authors, representing a variety of fields (history, sociology, literary, theatre and film studies, cultural anthropology) analyze many aspects of Łódź’s economic, social and cultural life before the outbreak of World War II. In reference to Łódź modernism, they explore notions like modernity, metropolitanism and peripherality, multi-culturalism and multi-ethnicity (Łódź was a labor destination for German settlers, Polish peasants, Jews, as well as newcomers from the Russian interior), the phenomenon of workers’ movements which peaked during the revolution of 1905, and the expansion of mass entertainment. The publication also looks at issues linked to urban infrastructure, animators of cultural life, and the emergence of new religious, political, and emancipation movements.