Scenes of the World to Come: European Architecture and the American Challenge, 1893–1960
Scenes of the World to Come: European Architecture and the American Challenge, 1893–1960
Tracing the origins of Americanism back to the late nineteenth century, Scenes of the World to Come focuses on the European discovery of the American city—with its grand hotels, skyscrapers, and massive industrial plants, its new-found sense of efficiency and mobility, and its infatuation with domestic appliances and mechanization.
The book analyzes the global structures and thematic strategies according to which American architectural forms and urban models migrated to Europe, bringing the promise of a new architecture and, along with it, the threat of a dissolution of European identity.
Jean-Louis Cohen
Graphic design by Frédéric Célestin
Published in French as Scènes de la vie future : L’architecture européenne et la tentation de l’Amérique, 1893–1960
Co-published in 1995 with Flammarion
Softcover, 224 pages