Newspaper City

Newspaper City

EnglishHardback
Mackintosh Phillip Gordon
University of Toronto Press
EAN: 9781442646797
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Detailed information

In Newspaper City, Phillip Gordon Mackintosh scrutinizes the reluctance of early Torontonians to pave their streets. He demonstrates how Toronto’s two liberal newspapers, the Toronto Globe and Toronto Daily Star, nevertheless campaigned for surface infrastructure as the leading expression of modern urbanity, despite the broad resistance of property owners to pay for infrastructure improvements under local improvements by-laws. To boost paving, newspapers used their broadsheets to fashion two imagined cities for their readers: one overrun with animals, dirt, and marginal people, the other civilized, modern, and crowned with clean streets. However, the employment of capitalism to generate traditional public goods, such as concrete sidewalks, asphalt roads, regulated pedestrianism, and efficient automobilism, is complicated. Thus, the liberal newspapers’ promotion of a city of orderly infrastructure and contented people in actual Toronto proved strikingly illiberal. Consequently, Mackintosh’s study reveals the contradictory nature of newspapers and the historiographical complexities of newspaper research.

EAN 9781442646797
ISBN 1442646799
Binding Hardback
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Publication date April 7, 2017
Pages 368
Language English
Dimensions 236 x 161 x 25
Country Canada
Readership Professional & Scholarly
Authors Mackintosh Phillip Gordon
Illustrations 37 b&w illustrations