Omschrijving
Market halls at the intersection of civic order and public health Markets and market halls have always been more than about trade and nourishment. A detailed look at the histories of marketplaces provides evidence of the public health concerns they faced, as well as the social commotion, mobilization and, at times, unrest they hosted. This edited volume reappraises the market hall, examining both its architectural and its social and political significance.
Focusing on how these buildings embodied transformations in architecture and urbanism from the mid-nineteenth century until the age of COVID-19, Mobs and Microbes situates market halls at the intersection of civic order and public health. Central to this are advances in sanitation and hygiene. These radical interventions also mediated conflicting interests. Through their rational designs, market halls intertwined government policies and regulations, which formalized, controlled and literally imposed order. Additionally, markets served as demonstration grounds for community-led mobilization efforts. With case studies spanning North America, Europe, Asia, India and Africa, this edited volume provides a global perspective on covered market halls across many disciplines, including architecture, history of art and architecture, landscape architecture, food studies and urban history. Markets and market halls have always been more than about trade and nourishment. A detailed look at the histories of marketplaces provides evidence of the public health concerns they faced, as well as the social commotion, mobilization and, at times, unrest they hosted. This edited volume reappraises the market hall, examining both its architectural and its social and political significance.
Focusing on how these buildings embodied transformations in architecture and urbanism from the mid-nineteenth century until the age of COVID-19, Mobs and Microbes situates market halls at the intersection of civic order and public health. Central to this are advances in sanitation and hygiene. These radical interventions also mediated conflicting interests. Through their rational designs, market halls intertwined government policies and regulations, which formalized, controlled and literally imposed order. Additionally, markets served as demonstration grounds for community-led mobilization efforts. With case studies spanning North America, Europe, Asia, India and Africa, this edited volume provides a global perspective on covered market halls across many disciplines, including architecture, history of art and architecture, landscape architecture, food studies and urban history. Abbreviations
CHAPTER 1
Confluence
Samantha L. Martin & Leila Marie Farah
CHAPTER 2
Public Amenity or Public Threat? Epidemiology and Grassroots Activism in the Food Markets of New Orleans, 1900–1940
Ashley Rose Young
CHAPTER 3
The Crawford Market: Sanitary Problems, Engineered Solutions, and Symbolic Gestures in Late Nineteenth-Century Bombay
Daniel Williamson
CHAPTER 4
The Central Market in Hong Kong: Urban Amenities in a Speculative Field
Zhengfeng Wang
CHAPTER 5
Nairobi City Market: The Versatile Afterlife of a Colonial-Era Building in a Postcolonial World
Nkatha Gichuyia
CHAPTER 6
The St. Lawrence Market, Toronto: Changes and Continuity
Leila Marie Farah
CHAPTER 7
Between a Government Project and a Commercial Space for Ordinary Citizens: Dongan Market, 1903–1937
Xusheng Huang
CHAPTER 8
Hygiene, Urbanism, and Fascist Politics at Rome’s Wholesale Market
Ruth W. Lo
CHAPTER 9
Modernization and Mobilization: Parisian Retail Market Halls, 1961–1982
Emeline Houssard
CHAPTER 10
Finding Food at Torvehallerne: Market Halls in Copenhagen between Gastrosexual Consumerism and the Coronavirus Pandemic
Henriette Steiner
CHAPTER 11
Pandemics and Marketplaces: A Coda from Viareggio, Italy
Andrea Borghini & Min Kyung Lee
About the Authors
Index