Lizabeth Cohen is the Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies at Harvard University and the former dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. She is the author of Making a New Deal: Industrial Workers in Chicago, 1919-1939, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and winner of the Bancroft Prize, and A Consumers' Republic: The Politics of Mass Consumption in Postwar America.
"[Cohen] has not only taken the measure of a complicated man, but
also provided an incisive treatment of the entire urban-planning
world in America in the last half of the 20th century . . . [She]
has created a more enlightening book than has appeared on this
topic in quite some time." --Alan Ehrenhalt, The New York Times
"Kudos to Harvard professor Lizabeth Cohen for exhuming the
cantankerous, ambitious and idealistic Logue in her charming and
successful biography-cum-urban affairs history . . . Ms. Cohen
ennobles [Logue's] life story, telling it as an impassioned crusade
for things that sound old-fashioned now but were and are worth
caring about: racial and socioeconomic integration of
neighborhoods; respectable public housing for lower-income
Americans; and social services and decent schooling for all . . .
Engrossing." --Alex Beam, The Wall Street Journal "As cities across
the country and around the world struggle to cope with the ongoing
pandemic, it is an opportune time to read Saving America's Cities,
Lizabeth Cohen's excellent study of postwar urban planning . . .
With deep archival research and a narrative sweep that fixes her
subject in the arc of midcentury US history, Cohen sketches Logue
vividly, illuminating his forcefulness, his passion, his masculine
confidence. She also provides a painful account of what he and so
many liberals of his generation were up against." --Kim
Phillips-Fein, The Nation "Lizabeth Cohen offers a complex portrait
of Logue . . . Urban renewal makes an easy foil against which
designers, planners, and politicians can contrast their proposals .
. . It's worth revisiting a time when a strong government hand was
seen as necessary for creating a vibrant city . . . Logue is a more
complicated figure who shows how urban renewal was an experiment
with successes and failures." --Courtney Humphries, The Boston
Globe "Vivid and discerning . . . Saving America's Cities is
remarkable, unique even, among the many chronicles of urban
renewal's failures. By taking readers into the 1970s, Cohen expands
the frame for the much-maligned mid-century policy, and argues that
urban renewal's failures and (rare) successes led to an era of
planning with rather than for communities . . . It's hard not to
recognize Logue's story in the persistent dilemmas of our own
times." --Samuel Zipp, Public Books
"Sixteen years after her landmark A Consumers' Republic,
distinguished historian Lizabeth Cohen reinterprets mid-century
urban renewal through the life of Ed Logue . . . Cohen, through
meticulous research, paints an intricate, sympathetic portrait . .
. Cohen has given readers a book as substantial and complex as the
man and controversial movement it explains." --Sam Kling, Booklist
(starred review) "More than a biography . . . Today, when
inequality is on the rise, Saving America's Cities warns against
easy solutions while offering hope that people can improve the
places where we live--and with that, people's lives." --Ann
Forsyth, Harvard Magazine "One of America's most controversial
policies as seen through the career of one of its most outspoken
advocates; an essential read." --Library Journal (starred
review)
"In this deeply researched work, Cohen skillfully chronicles
Logue's rise and fall . . . A robust, richly documented biography."
--Kirkus "Is it possible to write not only a good book about urban
renewal but also a beautiful one? If you are Lizabeth Cohen, it is.
Saving America's Cities is, at once, a new, wise and more balanced
take on past efforts to save America's cities and a fascinating
portrait of Ed Logue, a central figure in urban policy whose
personal trajectory parallels the course of our debates over what
works, and what doesn't. If you care about cities, you should read
this book. But you should also read it if you simply love a great
story full of compelling characters engaged in high-stakes
struggles. It's a wonderful achievement." --E. J. Dionne, Jr.,
author of Our Divided Political Heart, Why the Right Went Wrong and
co-author of One Nation After Trump
"Saving America's Cities is a richly documented account of Ed
Logue's remarkable career. Lizabeth Cohen captures the sense of
public purpose and possibility as well as the political battles
that made this a distinctive era in the history of American city
building. An impressive achievement that speaks to all who care
about the fortunes of urban America--past, present, and future."
--Alice O'Connor, Professor and Director, University of
California-Santa Barbara Blum Center on Global Poverty Alleviation
and Sustainable Development "In some ways, Edward Logue was an
imperial master builder, a latter-day version of Robert Moses. But
in others--particularly in his abiding concern for the welfare of
our cities' poor and powerless--he could not have been more
different. Lizabeth Cohen's penetrating study of the man and his
era sees both Logue and the post-war urban America he tried to
rebuild clearly, and persuasively. It's quite a story, very well
told." --Daniel Okrent, author of The Guarded Gate and Last
Call
"This captivating biography of Ed Logue explains how a
largely-forgotten liberal power broker made a profound but
little-known impact on the urban landscape we still inhabit. One of
our most distinguished historians, Lizabeth Cohen illuminates the
struggle to make cities both viable and democratic that shaped
postwar America. At a time when ordinary people can barely afford
to live in America's biggest cities, Cohen's book is a necessary
book to read." --Michael Kazin, Professor of History, Georgetown
University, and author of War Against War: The American Fight for
Peace, 1914-1918 "For a few decades near the end of the twentieth
century, the United States embraced the idea that it was the
government's responsibility to rebuild the country's deteriorating
cities. In her vividly told and meticulously researched biography
of Edward Logue, the high-flying master rebuilder of East Coast
cities, Lizabeth Cohen has brought this vanished era fully back to
life, and persuasively demanded a new respect for its
achievements." --Nicholas Lemann, Joseph Pulitzer II and Edith
Pulitzer Moore Professor of Journalism, Columbia University, and
author of Transaction Man "Lizabeth Cohen has written a terrific
biography of the American city planner Ed Logue--a man of huge
talent and equally staggering ego. Her account of Logue's rise and
fall is both personally gripping and illuminates how American
cities in the last century have tried, and failed, to balance the
claims of cash, class, and race. Her scholarship is impeccable; her
writing is a sheer pleasure." --Richard Sennett, Centennial
Professor of Sociology, London School of Economics, and author of
Building and Dwelling "Lizabeth Cohen's Saving America's Cities is
an engaging and well-crafted book that brilliantly captures the
important legacy of the urban planner Edward J. Logue. I learned a
great deal reading her compelling story, which provides a fresh
reexamination of postwar urban renewal, and suggests how American
cities can be made more dynamic and equitable." --William Julius
Wilson, Lewis P. and Linda L. Geyser University Professor, Harvard
University, and author of The Truly Disadvantaged: The Inner City,
the Underclass, and Public Policy "In this myth-shattering book,
Liz Cohen offers an important reassessment of urban renewal in
postwar America. Clear-eyed and convincing, Saving America's Cities
not only accounts for the failures of federal policies in this
period but also salvages the often-overlooked success stories as
well. In the end, Cohen makes great use of the past to suggest new
paths for the future." --Kevin M. Kruse, Professor of History,
Princeton University "The history of urban renewal in American
cities is typically portrayed as a tale of heroes vs. villains,
personified in the epic struggle between Jane Jacobs and Robert
Moses in 1950s and 1960s New York City. Lizabeth Cohen's detailed
historical research provides a powerful new lens to view this
disturbing yet formative time in the history of America's great
cities. Her lens is the evolution of Ed Logue, the so-called
"Master Rebuilder," in dealing with the urban crisis of New Haven,
Boston, and New York. She dismantles the oversimplified tale of
good and evil, understanding Logue's evolution in the context of
the massive economic, demographic, and social forces acting on our
cities, their residents, and their city-builders. She ends up
providing a new more usable history of the role of great
city-builders like Logue and of government involvement in the
complex evolution of our cities. Mayors, urban developers, and city
builders, as well as urban historians, all have much to learn from
her compelling new narrative." --Richard Florida, University
Professor, University of Toronto, and author of The Rise of the
Creative Class and The New Urban Crisis
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