{"id":3901,"date":"1979-06-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1979-06-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-60-no-6-june-1979-rediscovering-the-city\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T23:58:03","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T23:58:03","slug":"vol-60-no-6-june-1979-rediscovering-the-city","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-60-no-6-june-1979-rediscovering-the-city\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 60, No. 6 &#8211; June 1979 &#8211; Rediscovering the City"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">In grave disrepute a few years                     ago, city life is making a come-back. For tourists as well                     as residents, the city has again become the place to be. For                     both, there is rare satisfaction in being an urban explorer.                     It also serves to keep the city alive and well&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> A recent article in <em>Saturday Review <\/em>told of a native                     of New York City who had moved to a country home some years                     ago. He had repeatedly invited his father in New York to come                     and stay with him, always to be met with the same reply: &#8220;Me?                     Come to the country? Are you crazy? Where is there to walk?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Taking nothing away from the joys of rural life, one can                     see this urban denizen&#8217;s point of view. Except to the knowledgeable                     nature lover, the countryside appears to be static and dull,                     restful though it may be. By contrast, the city is restlessly                     alive &#8211; that is, the city proper as opposed to the suburbs.                     There are city-lovers as well as nature-lovers, sharing the                     same keen eye for detail; to the former, the &#8220;streetscape&#8221;                     of the city holds a fascination that never palls.<\/p>\n<p>It is the fascination of the kaleidoscope &#8211; of endlessly                     changing patterns and colours. A person may walk down the                     same street a hundred times and notice things that have never                     registered on him before. They may be as inconspicuous as                     a gargoyle at the top of a building, a sign peeping out of                     a shop window, a menu on display at the front of a restaurant.                     No bird-watcher ever saw such variegation. The faces, shapes,                     and raiment of the crowd change constantly as it surges by.<\/p>\n<p>As the summer vacation season approaches this year, hundreds                     of thousands of Canadians are making plans to savour the manifold                     pleasures of the city. Some will go abroad, some to the United                     States. More of them than ever will visit the cities of Canada,                     even though they may normally live in other Canadian cities                     or their suburbs. They will join resident city-lovers in their                     agreeable rounds of things to see and do.<\/p>\n<p>In their travels, these urban tourists will be taking part                     in a kind of renaissance that has affected not only tourism,                     but trends in lifestyles, the arts and business. For, after                     a long spell of neglecting and even scorning the big city,                     people are now rediscovering its worth. Whether as individuals,                     in groups or through their elected representatives, they are                     breathing new life into the downtown stone and steel and concrete.                     They have recognized anew that the city is the fulcrum of                     civilization, and that it is indispensable in this role.<\/p>\n<p>The image of the city in the public mind has come almost                     full circle in a single generation. Back in the 1940s, in                     the golden age of radio, the airwaves were rife with popular                     songs literally singing the praises of city life. If it wasn&#8217;t                     April in Paris, it was New York in June, a foggy day in London,                     or New Orleans at any time. To people in those days, the big                     city represented warmth, good living, glamour and romance.<\/p>\n<p>Twenty years later it had become as fashionable to deplore                     cities &#8211; especially, though not exclusively, in the United                     States &#8211; as it once had been to glorify them. American intellectuals                     <em>en masse <\/em>declared their cities to be tottering on the                     brink of doom. And indeed, evidence was all around of the                     urban collapse they predicted. Whole huge sections of U.S.                     cities were ravaged by rioting, arson and looting.<\/p>\n<p>The situation was never so grim in Canada, where a tradition                     of orderliness at least made our cities relatively safe places                     to live in and visit. Still, a rising incidence of crime and                     the chaos caused by demonstrations and public service strikes                     considerably dimmed the attraction of our home-grown bright                     lights.<\/p>\n<p>The cause of it all was concisely explained by author James                     Michener in an essay written in 1967. &#8220;Ours is the first generation                     in which people have had the option of rejecting the city                     if they wished,&#8221; he pointed out. &#8220;The automobile, new systems                     of marketing and communication, plus the superior attraction                     of the suburbs, enabled us to live quite satisfactory lives                     while ignoring the city&#8230;&#8221; The consequences of this rejection                     in the U.S. included urban decay, civil unrest, and a massive                     increase in crime among the dispossessed persons left behind                     in the city core.<\/p>\n<p>In Canada, the consequences were somewhat different: deterioration                     and sterility. This accorded with the global over-view of                     the urban malaise, as expressed by such experts as Lewis Mumford                     &#8211; that city life &#8220;dehumanized&#8221; people, turning them into either                     neo-barbarians or automatons. Mumford blamed it on human slavery                     to the machines that tend to dominate modern living. He said,                     in effect, that only through a &#8220;re-humanization&#8221; could the                     city be saved.<\/p>\n<p>Fortunately, it looks as if that is exactly what is now                     happening. Even in the American cities worst afflicted by                     the urban blight of the 1960s, former suburbanites are moving                     back into the core areas, braving obvious dangers for the                     sake of being back in the swing of city life. Canadians too                     are showing a fresh appreciation of their inner cities in                     a reversal of the mood that impelled them to withdraw to the                     suburbs a few years ago. Toronto, for example, has taken on                     added vitality since families have begun renovating and taking                     up residence in run-down houses and other buildings close                     to the centre of town.<\/p>\n<h3>Getting people out of their cars and                   back on their feet<\/h3>\n<p>All over North America the city core is regaining its traditional                     status as a market-place. After many years of focussing their                     attention and investments on suburban shopping centres, retailers                     have taken a rewarding second look at business prospects downtown.                     Malls containing all the shopping and entertainment amenities                     of main street under one roof have been connected to the traditional                     department stores. When seen in the light of the need for                     re-humanization, it is noteworthy that these malls depend                     on people walking rather than driving. They have taken them                     out of their cars and put them back on their feet, thus bringing                     them once again into contact with their fellows on a basic                     human scale.<\/p>\n<p>The resuscitation of the city after it had almost been given                     up for dead seems to be due to a fact that escaped the notice                     of the urban soothsayers of yester-year. This is that people                     <em>like <\/em>being in the city, despite its noise, dirt, danger                     and all the rest. They like the glitter, the bustle, the rubbing                     of shoulders, the electric sensation of high-powered activity.                     In wanting to be in a city, people are obeying an impulse                     that is nearly as old as mankind.<\/p>\n<p>Before history was ever written, human beings began to band                     together in market-places formed for the purpose of trading.                     The inhabitants of the outlying areas travelled to them with                     their produce, and presumably lingered for a primitive night                     on the town. As time went on, more and more people decided                     to put down roots in these commercial centres.<\/p>\n<p>Some became craftsmen, building and mending things for people                     who came in from the surrounding countryside. Rulers, priests                     and scholars emerged. Defences, schools, and places of worship                     and entertainment were constructed. The fundamental culture                     of the populace was enhanced and enshrined in palaces, temples                     and statuary. In places that were ports or on main trading                     routes, a cross-fertilization developed with the cultures                     of other lands.<\/p>\n<p>And so were born the world&#8217;s cities. But not all agglomerations                     of population became true cities, as Lewis Mumford has pointed                     out. According to him, the difference between a city and a                     town is &#8220;the unique function of the city as a container and                     transmitter of culture&#8221;. It has also been an active generator                     of culture from the bronze age to this day.<\/p>\n<h3>From the bronze age on, a generator                   of culture<\/h3>\n<p>In their cultural dimension, cities have always attracted                     men of ability in search of learning and inspiration. &#8220;The                     City, the City!&#8221; wrote Cicero of his beloved Rome. &#8220;Devote                     yourself to her and live in her incomparable light.&#8221; The sheer                     size of the population offered scope for artists and artisans                     to give free rein to their abilities. The city was where Michelangelo                     could paint a mural, where Moli\u00e8re could get a play                     produced, where Beethoven could introduce a symphony, where                     Christopher Wren could build a church.<\/p>\n<p>In any North American city today you still see things that                     could only exist in an urban setting. No small town or suburb                     can afford a great library, art gallery, or museum. Symphony                     orchestras, opera and theatre companies may tour the outlying                     regions, but the city is their natural habitat. The same applies,                     with rare exceptions, to professional sports teams and the                     stadia and arenas they play in. They need the broad base of                     population on which urban culture lives.<\/p>\n<p>The scale of the city is one of its chief sources of enjoyment                     and edification. &#8220;When a man is tired of London he is tired                     of life,&#8221; said Dr. Samuel Johnson in 1777, &#8220;for there is in                     London all that life can afford.&#8221; A big city is a small world                     unto itself, packing all aspects of life into small, accessible                     compartments. It is at once a microcosm and a microscope,                     containing and magnifying the best and worst of humanity.                     The city&#8217;s contrast between good and evil, beauty and ugliness,                     has always been fuel for the creative fires of artists of                     all kinds.<\/p>\n<h3>Variety lives both within and among                   Canadian cities<\/h3>\n<p>In some cities the world is quite literally represented.                     Canadians are particularly favoured in this respect. Thanks                     to immigration and the Canadian tradition of encouraging ethnic                     diversity, few cities in the world are as cosmopolitan as                     our three largest ones. Smaller places such as Winnipeg and                     Hamilton are not far behind.<\/p>\n<p>Within three blocks of a single street in Montreal, for                     instance, you will find Russian, Creole, Japanese, Spanish,                     Italian, Chinese, French, Arab, and West Indian restaurants,                     plus American-style bars and a British-style pub or two. Nor                     is this street unique for its variety in the cosmopolitan                     heart of Montreal. Whole districts of our cities have assumed                     the character of the country of origin of most of their residents.                     Hence there are parts of Toronto where you would swear you                     were in Lisbon or Athens, and streets in Vancouver that might                     be in Hong Kong.<\/p>\n<p>Ethnic diversity is only one of the reasons why Canadians                     should explore their own cities before looking farther afield.                     If there is variety within Canadian cities, there is also                     great variety among them. A person from, say, Calgary will                     find a world of difference from what he is used to at home                     in the salty old seaport and garrison atmosphere of Halifax.                     And vice versa: for someone from Halifax to visit Calgary                     is to sample an entirely unfamiliar air of cowboys and Indians,                     oil and cattle &#8211; the air of both the old and new West.<\/p>\n<h3>Canada&#8217;s newer cities show that history                   need not be old<\/h3>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s cities range from the very old to the very new.                     Founded by Champlain in 1608, Quebec City is among the most                     ancient cities on the continent; it remains steeped in history                     and splendid charm. On the other hand, Vancouver was still                     a swamp and a stretch of thickly-wooded mountainside when                     it was chosen as recently as 1885 as the western terminus                     of the Canadian Pacific Railway. It was chosen well, in one                     of the most beautiful natural settings ever to grace man&#8217;s                     handiwork. Its very newness, added to its location on the                     Pacific, gives it a special casual verve.<\/p>\n<p>A trip to one of our newer cities will hold some surprises                     to anyone who equates history with antiquity. The excellent                     Provincial Museum of Alberta in Edmonton, for example, provides                     proof that history is no less intriguing for being relatively                     new. There, an exhibit of farm machinery dating back to before                     the turn of the century can prove at least as interesting                     as a display of suits of armour in one of the old cities of                     Europe. Edmonton, incidentally, boasts eight other museums,                     including the huge restored Fort Edmonton. This is just one                     indication of how Western Canadians cherish and preserve their                     collective past.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;A man should know something of his own country, too, before                     he goes abroad,&#8221; wrote Laurence Sterne in <em>Tristram Shandy<\/em>.                     Unfortunately, Canadians in the past have proved all too ready                     to make their way elsewhere on their vacations, ignoring exhortations                     to &#8220;see Canada first&#8221;. When they <em>have <\/em>travelled in                     their own land, they have tended to give the cities short                     shrift in favour of Canada&#8217;s natural beauties. With our newer                     cities coming of age and our older ones being restored, now                     is the time to consider exploring the wealth of interest and                     entertainment they hold.<\/p>\n<h3>Poking around the side streets simply                   to see                   what is there&#8230;<\/h3>\n<p>But if we should know something of our own country and its                     other cities, then surely we should also know something of                     the cities we ourselves live in, or are close to. It is remarkable                     how many people there are who can live in a city or one of                     its suburbs and not take the slightest interest in what there                     is, or what is happening, in the heart of town. There are                     people who have never been inside their city&#8217;s museums, except                     perhaps as children on school tours. Others might go to a                     hockey or football game, but never to a concert or a play                     downtown.<\/p>\n<p>These things are, of course, matters of taste; it is perhaps                     a greater shame that some have never even walked the streets                     of their cities. They have never strolled around its various                     districts, with their different occupational and ethnic characteristics,                     to get the feel of how their fellow city-dwellers work and                     live. They have never sampled the noisy and odoriferous splendours                     of a city market on a hot summer day, nor cooled off in the                     hushed sanctuary of one of the churches. They have never taken                     an hour or two out of their lives to do nothing more than                     poke around the side streets simply to see what is there.<\/p>\n<p>Instead many people keep to their cars, which carry them                     unseeingly home when their day&#8217;s work is finished. The hasty                     tension of the expressway at rush hour is surely one of the                     least attractive aspects of urban life. In the evening they                     may watch an episode of a television series about an American                     city. And, during the commercials, they may ponder how boring                     their lives have become.<\/p>\n<p>They are missing out on a great deal of stimulating experience                     which is more or less there for the taking. The exploration                     of cities is one of the cheapest forms of entertainment there                     is. You can, of course, spend a fortune in the city; but there                     is much to be done and seen that costs practically nothing                     or very little. One good way of reacquainting yourself with                     your own city is to take an inexpensive bus tour designed                     for out-of-town visitors. You may be surprised at how many                     things the guide points out that have never caught your attention                     before.<\/p>\n<p>Whether it is your own or somebody else&#8217;s, the city always                     offers things to catch your attention, because in small, subtle                     ways, it is constantly changing. The benefits of city-viewing                     are mutual, for the city needs people to take an interest                     in it to keep it alive and well. It needs people who are willing                     to participate in it. It needs life and love in its heart                     if it is to continue to provide its immense benefits to mankind.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[59],"class_list":["post-3901","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-59"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 60, No. 6 - June 1979 - Rediscovering the City - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-60-no-6-june-1979-rediscovering-the-city\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 60, No. 6 - June 1979 - Rediscovering the City - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In grave disrepute a few years ago, city life is making a come-back. 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