For a very long
time, writers have sneered at the suburbs. They have looked down
on suburbanites for being materialistic, unimaginative, and boring.
They have complained about the social and physical monotony of
the suburban scene while deploring its individualism and lack
of community. Left-wing critics – which is to say the majority
– have described the suburbs as places of ersatz satisfactions,
where capitalism twists our yearnings for a better life into double
garages and barbecues. To this familiar litany many have recently
added the charge that suburban living is irresponsible, the ultimate
manifestation of our society’s commitment to unsustainable
growth. One alternative that is currently in favour is the New
Urbanism, which promises to recreate the city in the suburbs.
There is also a more pessimistic vision. Best expressed in Mike
Davis’ dystopian view of Los Angeles, first in City of Quartz.
Excavating the Future in Los Angeles (London and New York: Verso,
1990) and more recently in Ecology of Fear. Los Angeles and the
Imagination of Disaster (New York: Holt, 1998), it reckons that
we are all going to hell in a hand-basket.
Although the storm of criticism has gathered in fury, the tide
may yet be turning. A growing number of writers have begun to
defend the suburbs. In the United States the tone, and to some
extent the fashion, was set more than a decade ago by Joel Garreau
in Edge City. Life on the New Frontier (New York: Doubleday, 1991).
His recognition of ‘Edge Cities’ suggests a new take
on what is happening at the metropolitan fringe: instead of formless
sprawl he discerns new nodes of economic activity, community,
and (yes) culture. Instead of uniformity he sees diversity; in
place of isolation and anomie he describes vibrant communities
of interest; instead of conformity he finds limitless self-expression.
Lately, American academics have elaborated upon these themes,
and in particular that of diversity. It has become conventional
to note that modern suburbs contain all kinds of people, rich
and (fairly) poor, immigrant and native-born, white and other
shades. Historians such as Andrew Wiese and Becky Nicolaides are
now reporting that the same was also true in the past. They are
also re-examining their anti-suburban prejudices, as Rosalyn Baxandall
and Elizabeth Ewen do in their confessional introduction to Picture
Windows. How the Suburbs Happened (New York: Basic Books, 2000).
The same re-assessment is underway in Britain, although perhaps
less vigorously. Here, for example, the geographers Jeremy Whitehand
and Catherine Carr have pointed out in Twentieth-Century Suburbs.
A Morphological Approach (London: Routledge, 2001) that even the
inter-war suburban semis came a range of sizes and styles. Academics
and writers of socially-grounded fiction, such as Zadie Smith
in White Teeth (London: Hamish Hamilton, 2000), have shown that
the people who now occupy those semis come in all shades. This
social and physical diversity is at least comparable with that
of the nineteenth-century terraces that intellectuals have been
gentrifying for a generation or more. Stereotypes are being questioned
and, perhaps for the first time, there is a real debate about
the merits of the suburbs.
In Suburban Century, Mark Clapson takes stock of
the historiography, and the historical experience, of suburban
development over the past century. It is very much a work of synthesis,
drawing in only a few cases upon the author’s research.
Focusing on the social aspects of the subject, he claims to present
the evidence that will enable readers to draw their own conclusions.(p.
7) He does this, but it is clear where his own sympathies lie.
They are implied early on, in his suggestion that the emergence
of a more favourable view of suburbs is a sign that their historiography
is finally ‘maturing’.(p. 9) His own perspective is
finally unveiled, however, when he declares that his purpose is
‘to rescue suburbia from the enormous condescension of the
rich, young, and trendy’.(p. 13) He is not an uncritical
booster, but it is clear where he stands.
Depending on how broadly or narrowly they are defined, suburbs
may be said to date back a couple of centuries or several millennia.
Clapson concentrates on the past century, which is when suburban
living became the norm in what is still usually described as the
developed world. He covers some of the inevitable topics and in
an effective fashion. Early chapters survey the range of ‘expert’
opinion and outline what many believe to have been the major forces
that have shaped the growth and evolution of suburbs, in particular
the rise of mass transit and the automobile. He discusses the
aspirations that led or drove people into the suburbs, including
a pervasive anti-urbanism, the desire to own one’s own home,
and to live in spacious, attractive districts that are close to,
or incorporate some elements of, the country. He takes on the
argument, most fully developed by feminists since the 1960s, that
suburban environments best suit men, largely because women have
found the transportation options to be limiting. Assessing the
evidence he concludes that this may sometimes have been true but
that it has usually been overstated. He also takes on those who
have criticised the suburbs for their alienated individualism
and social conformity. Again, he argues, both points have been
overstated. Suburbanites are often joiners, especially in the
early years of settlement when friends have to be made and social
institutions built up, but this is their choice. These are reasonable
conclusions, well expressed.
Slightly less conventional is Clapson’s treatment of the
class and ethnic dimensions of the suburban trend. Acknowledging
recent arguments that modern suburbs are socially diverse, he
plays up their ethnic mix. He devotes a chapter to the suburbanisation
of Blacks, and another to Jews and Asian immigrants. This is a
useful corrective to the stereotype that English and American
suburbs are still largely white. Interestingly, his conclusion
is that in moving to the urban fringe, minorities have been motivated
by almost exactly the same considerations as the white majority,
which suggests that ethnic suburbs are less distinctive than they
may at first appear. If true, I am not sure whether this conclusion
is comforting or dispiriting. But suburbs have often been stereotyped
not only as white, but also as middle class. Clapson notes that
this stereotype has not been accurate, but he does not deal with
the issue head on, for example by discussing the mechanisms that
made it possible for workers to settle at the urban fringe. In
Britain, the construction of council estates after World War I
was obviously vital in this regard; in the United States, speculative
builders catered to workers in industrial suburbs, while in the
extensive fringe areas that lacked municipal government, many
workers simply built their own homes. These corporation, industrial,
and unplanned suburbs have differed significantly from the middle-class
subdivisions of conventional mythology, and these points of class
difference deserve more sustained attention in a survey such as
this.
The most unconventional aspects of Suburban Century,
and its main interest, is its comparative frame of reference and
the manner in which it seamlessly connects past and present. Trained
as a historian, Clapson is nevertheless comfortable with the sociological
literature and with the construction of a narrative that gives
a fairly balanced coverage of the entire twentieth century. He
speaks, then, to historians and social scientists alike. Even
more unusually, he undertakes to compare the English experience
with that of the United States, with occasional references to
Scotland, Canada and Australia thrown in for good measure. Most
histories of cities and suburbs focus on just one place; a few
have tried to interpret a national experience, but almost none
compare countries. In particular, and to a remarkable degree,
histories of suburbanisation in Britain and the United States
rarely make more than passing transatlantic references. This is
obviously unfortunate. As Robert Fishman has argued in Bourgeois
Utopias: the Rise and Fall of Suburbia (New York: Basic Books,
1987), a rare comparative study, the design of the early middle-class
English suburbs had enormous influence in the United States. More
importantly, as Clapson claims, many of the same motives have
driven the suburban trend in both countries. There are, of course,
national differences. The most obvious of these are residential
densities and, because of different planning environments, varying
degrees of sprawl. On this point Clapson extends Arthur Edwards’
vivid simile, suggesting that if English cities have grown incrementally
and amorphously, like lichen, those in the United States are lichen
on growth hormones. He notes other differences too, most obviously
the contrasting history of race relations, and the differing proportions
of immigrants, especially in the first half of the twentieth century.
One of the challenges of a comparative study, particularly on
a topic that has attracted a lot of attention, is being able to
keep up with the pertinent literature and do justice to the major
debates. Clapson is widely-read: the list of references runs to
about 560 items. The author of Invincible Green Suburbs,
Brave New Towns. Social Change and Urban Dispersal in Post-war
England (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1998),
he speaks with authority of the modern British experience but
misses, or downplays, some important elements of the American
scene. He suggests, for example, that Jews were central to the
emergence of ethnic diversity in American suburbs. This is arguable
for New York, and perhaps one or two other places, but it is not
generally true. In many eastern cities, and throughout the midwest,
suburban industries led other immigrants into the suburbs. In
the Chicago area, for example, it drew Germans to Hammond, Poles
to West Hammond, and Italians to Chicago Heights. With regard
to the suburbanisation of African-Americans, Clapson barely acknowledges
the argument that has been articulated most forcefully by William
Julius Wilson, notably in The Truly Disadvantaged: the Inner
City, the Underclass and Public Policy (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1987). Wilson concedes that in the United States
suburbanisation has reflected the opening up of opportunities
for a new black middle class, but argues that it has left behind
a ghettoised underclass, whose opportunities for social and geographical
advancement have been reduced almost to the vanishing point. With
respect to the American working class, Clapson accepts the established
view that workers followed the middle class into the suburbs and,
in so doing, were essentially imitating their social superiors.
This downplays the very long history of working-class settlement
at the fringe of US cities, and overlooks the fact that, as a
number of writers have shown, including Olivier Zunz in The
Changing Face of Inequality: Urbanization, Industrial Development
and Immigrants in Detroit, 1880-1920 (Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1982), in moving to the suburbs workers were
driven by motives that were different from those of the middle
class. Workers were, above all, determined to gain control over
some aspect of their lives by emancipating themselves from the
arbitrary tyrannies of the landlord.(1)
Finally, Clapson underestimates the importance of the local political
realm. To be sure, he acknowledges that in the United States suburban
municipalities have often exercised their powers to exclude those
whom they view as socially undesirable. He also discusses, at
some length, the implications of suburbanisation for national
party politics. But purely local politics has a different, and
a greater, kind of significance in the United States than in Britain.
American municipalities have constitutional powers; they cannot
be abolished or amalgamated by state and federal governments against
their will. The proliferation of local governments continues to
shape the suburbanisation process; indeed Americans commonly define
suburbs, in part, as places with a political identity. Each of
these features of the American experience sets it apart from the
British, and in neglecting them Clapson reveals the geographical
bias of his knowledge and experience. As a result, I also believe
that he overstates the commonalities in the historical experience
of these countries.
It would be a pity if certain gaps in coverage were to discourage
potential readers in the United States. In a recent review article,
Mark Swenarton has noted that the literature on American suburbs
is extensive, lively, and in many ways diverse.(2)
That is true, but it is also consistently parochial. It is the
great merit of Suburban Century that it tries to open up some
channels of dialogue between historians of US and British suburbs.
This, as much as any specific claims that it makes, may be its
lasting contribution.
January 2004
Notes
1. Richard Harris, ‘The
suburban worker in the history of labor,’ International Labor
and Working-Class History, 64 (2003), 8-24.
2. Mark Swenarton, ‘Tudor
Walters and Tudorbethan. Reassessing Britain’s inter-war suburbs’,
Planning Perspectives, 17 (2002), 267-86.
Dr Clapson's response. |