Metropolitan Railways

Metropolitan Railways
Author: William D. Middleton
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2003
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 9780253341792

"Metropolitan Railways" is a large-scale, illustrated volume that deals with the growth and development of urban rail transit systems in North America.

METRO-LAND

METRO-LAND
Author: Oliver Green
Publisher: Oldcastle Books Ltd
Total Pages: 215
Release: 2015-08-03
Genre: History
ISBN: 1904915477

Metro-land was published annually from 1915 until 1932 featuring evocative descriptions and photographs of historic villages and rural vistas of the areas served by the Metropolitan Railway This 1924 edition was published just as the property and leisure boom was under way and also had the extra purpose of promoting The British Empire Exhibition of 1924 at Wembley,

The Railway and Modernity

The Railway and Modernity
Author: Matthew Beaumont
Publisher: Peter Lang
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2007
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 9783039110247

Most research and writing on railway history has been undertaken in a way that disconnects it from the wider cultural milieu. Authors have been very effective at constructing specialist histories of transport, but have failed to register the railway's central importance in the representation and understanding of modernity. This book brings together contributions from a range of established scholars in a variety of disciplines with the central purpose of exploring the railway less as a transport technology than as a key signifier of capitalist modernity. It examines the complex social relations in which the railway became historically embedded, identifying it as a central problematic in the cultural experience of modernity. It avoids the limitations of both the close-sighted empiricism typical of many transport historians and the long-sighted generalizations of cultural commentators who view the railway merely as a shorthand for the concept of progress over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The book draws on a diverse range of materials, including literary and historical forms of representation. It is also informed by a creative application of various critical theories.

Metropolitan Corridor

Metropolitan Corridor
Author: John R. Stilgoe
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 420
Release: 1985-01-01
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 9780300034813

An engaging and delightfully illustrated account of the impact of railroads on the American built environment and on American culture from the last decades of the nineteenth century to the 1930's.