This chapter reflects on the potent combination of melancholy and nostalgia that can be associated with the cinematic presentation of change in cities. Opening with a discussion of two versions of Lionel Bart’s song, ‘Fings Ain’t Wot They Used T’Be’, the chapter argues against a generalised nostalgia for the vanished city. Instead it seeks to demonstrate the importance of attention to the particularity of what has been lost, its formal presentation and its contexts. This argument is developed through the analysis of filmic responses to the particular, planned development of two East London places at two different periods: Hessel Street (as part of mid-twentieth-century slum clearance) and the Lower Lea Valley (as preparation for the 2012 Lo...
This book works with two contrasting imaginings of 1960s London: the one of the excess and comic vac...
London exerts attraction and repulsion upon travellers, writers and artists alike.Its past is oversh...
About Now MMX is both Raban’s attempt to resolve the difficulty of rendering 3-dimensional space and...
This book, a collection of essays by expert film researchers and lecturers, contributes to the growi...
The relationship between spectators, performers and spaces is investigated in a critical perspective...
London has been peopled as much in the mind as in its streets. No city has been written about more. ...
This article considers the theme of memory in (post-)Thatcherite London through the analysis of Moor...
Preconceived notions about the scope of architecture and its definition as a purely spatial dimensio...
Photography narrates places through space and time. It is a storytelling method and format that not ...
London emerged from World War II victorious yet war-ravaged, as the Blitz of 1940-1 and 1944-5 destr...
This is an essay which discusses filmic exploration through re-staging and reshooting. The text focu...
London as Screen Gateway explores how London features within screen narratives and as a location of ...
Discourses of place are implicated in the urban regeneration strategies of government authorities th...
London’s Urban Landscape is the first major study of a global city to adopt a materialist perspectiv...
From the 1920s until a decade after the Second World War, British municipalities not only controlled...
This book works with two contrasting imaginings of 1960s London: the one of the excess and comic vac...
London exerts attraction and repulsion upon travellers, writers and artists alike.Its past is oversh...
About Now MMX is both Raban’s attempt to resolve the difficulty of rendering 3-dimensional space and...
This book, a collection of essays by expert film researchers and lecturers, contributes to the growi...
The relationship between spectators, performers and spaces is investigated in a critical perspective...
London has been peopled as much in the mind as in its streets. No city has been written about more. ...
This article considers the theme of memory in (post-)Thatcherite London through the analysis of Moor...
Preconceived notions about the scope of architecture and its definition as a purely spatial dimensio...
Photography narrates places through space and time. It is a storytelling method and format that not ...
London emerged from World War II victorious yet war-ravaged, as the Blitz of 1940-1 and 1944-5 destr...
This is an essay which discusses filmic exploration through re-staging and reshooting. The text focu...
London as Screen Gateway explores how London features within screen narratives and as a location of ...
Discourses of place are implicated in the urban regeneration strategies of government authorities th...
London’s Urban Landscape is the first major study of a global city to adopt a materialist perspectiv...
From the 1920s until a decade after the Second World War, British municipalities not only controlled...
This book works with two contrasting imaginings of 1960s London: the one of the excess and comic vac...
London exerts attraction and repulsion upon travellers, writers and artists alike.Its past is oversh...
About Now MMX is both Raban’s attempt to resolve the difficulty of rendering 3-dimensional space and...