Regaining Paradise: Englishness and the Early Garden City Movement

by Standish Meacham

0 ratings • 0 reviews • 0 shelved
Book cover for Regaining Paradise

Bookhype may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. Full disclosure.

This engaging book considers the British social reform movement at the beginning of the twentieth century through the lens of the garden city movement, a plan to build new communities on open land that would provide a healthy, aesthetically pleasing environment free from overcrowding and pollution. Standish Meacham argues that although the garden city movement initially embodied radical schemes for the reformation of society, it became in the hands of its upper-middle-class proponents a device for maintaining the established order in the face of threatening social change. In the complex clash between conservative and progressive impulses among garden city proponents, conservatism ultimately prevailed.

Meacham shows that even socialist architects closely associated with the movement and its most famous prewar projects at Letchworth and Hampstead relied for inspiration on the villages of England's pre-industrial squirearchy. The result was the reaffirmation of a particular concept of Englishness that influenced both social policy and urban design.

  • ISBN10 0300191499
  • ISBN13 9780300191493
  • Publish Date 1 June 1999 (first published 11 May 1999)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Yale University Press