The New American Small Town

The New American Small Town

Lessons for Sustainable Urban Futures

Jennifer Mapes

West Virginia University Press

West Virginia University Press

9781959000471

$26.99

Paperback

2025-06-01

2025-06-01

A critical examination of American small-town narratives contrasted with lived experiences.
What makes a sustainable city? When planners and politicians talk about making cities more sustainable, they often describe changes to large urban centers like New York City or Los Angeles. Yet when they suggest solutions for sustainable living, they talk about walkable neighborhoods, traditional architecture, and diverse land uses; they talk about small towns. Planners and developers are now working to introduce a “small-town feel” into our large cities and suburbs in hopes that it will provide a sense of community and reduce the use of automobiles.

So, what of small towns themselves? We don’t talk about these places as much. They are often assumed to be utopias of the past or crumbling ghost towns of the present day rather than places with potential for sustainable living. This book critically examines narratives of American small towns, contrasting them with lived experiences in these places, and considers both the myth and reality in the context of current urban challenges. Interweaving stories from and about U.S. small towns, it offers lessons in sustainable urbanism that can be applied both in the towns themselves and to the larger cities and suburbs where most Americans now live.
 

6.000in x 9.000in x 0.500in

Weight data not found for this book.

"The book offers hope-filled portraits of small towns as livable, sustainable, and diverse places and serves as an important corrective to the media narrative of alienated, left-behind rural voters."
—Mark Bjelland, author of Good Places for All
 

178 Pages

Summary text

Contents text

Author Text

Reviews text