From Collective Memory to Collective Imagination: Time,Place, and Urban Redevelopment |
| |
Authors: | Michael Ian Borer |
| |
Affiliation: | University of Nevada, Las Vegas |
| |
Abstract: | This article is about a place that does not exist, yet. It is about residents' perceptions of redevelopment plans involving the reconstruction of a defunct neighborhood firehouse. Interviews revealed the residents' “collective imagination” as they actively envisioned potential future outcomes for a firehouse‐turned–community center. When asked about the needs of the community, interviewees discussed the current conditions of their neighborhood (the present), its history (the past), and how they would like to see it change (the future). This corresponds well with George Herbert Mead's ideas about temporality. I argue that connecting the identity of a place to a sociological understanding of time (especially Mead's) is a necessary step for gaining a better understanding of the subjective side of urbanization and ultimately creating a better vernacular knowledge base for urban redevelopment plans. |
| |
Keywords: | imagination place identity time community civic culture urban |
|
|