Lewis Mumford, a life

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Donald L. Miller: Lewis Mumford, a life (1992, University of Pittsburgh Press)

628 pages

English language

Published July 27, 1992 by University of Pittsburgh Press.

ISBN:
978-0-8229-5907-6
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A multitalented man of letters, Mumford is one of the ""last intellectuals,"" Russell Jacoby's term for that generation of independent writers and thinkers who once survived without a base in the university. Here, Miller (History/Lafayette College) gives us an overly long--though compelling--biography that carefully places Mumford's achievement within the contours of 20th-century cultural and political history. Born in 1895, Mumford, the illegitimate son of a German housekeeper and her employer's nephew, was very much a child of the century, which he witnessed mostly from his native New York, a city that served as his Yale College and Harvard Yard. A sometime CCNY student, Mumford was the consummate autodidact, schooling himself in the writings of Bernard Shaw as well as in the development of his beloved city, whose every street and alleyway he seems to have explored with a view towards his future role as a theorist and critic of architecture …

3 editions

Subjects

  • Mumford, Lewis, 1895-
  • Social reformers -- United States -- Biography.
  • City planners -- United States -- Biography.
  • Architects -- United States -- Biography.