City of Broken Dreams
Myth-Making, Nationalism and the University in an African Motor City
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Michigan State University Press
Published:1st Feb '19
Should be back in stock very soon

What role should universities have in revitalizing rust-belt motor cities left to decay by economic and political transformation? In City of Broken Dreams, author Leslie J Bank addresses this question through a detailed case study of East London, a city in South Africa’s Eastern Cape. Here, as in American motor cities like Detroit and Flint, the car’s cultural power and association with the endless possibilities of modernity lie at the heart of the refusal to seek alternative development paths leading away from racially inscribed automotive capitalism. Rooting the university in a history of industrialisation, placemaking and city-building, this book examines contemporary debates about the role that urban universities should have in building economies, creating jobs and reshaping the politics and identities of their communities. In South Africa as in many other nations, institutions of higher education represent potentially powerful cultural and socioeconomic agents, but the 2015 #FeesMustFall student protests against rising tuition costs highlighted the limits of their power. Firmly grounded in the particulars of East London, this thoughtful study illuminates questions common to rust-belt cities and universities around the world.
This truly remarkable book provides an outstanding and highly innovative call for how re-thinking the idea of the university can lead to a regeneration of East London, South Africa’s own “rust-belt city.” With the settler-nationalist dream of the “motor city” fading, the book reflects on the contradictory nature of post-apartheid urbanism, and how this relates to changing cultural configurations and the recent rise of an African middle class. Written by one of South Africa’s most engaged anthropologists, this book will attract widespread attention globally as well as locally. — Roger Southall, Professor Emeritus in Sociology, University of the Witwatersrand
There is a thread of exceptionalism that runs through South African scholarship. In this book, author Leslie J Bank explores the value of the less common approach of comparison. He assesses the fortunes of two rust-belt cities, Detroit and East London, both historically dependent on the motor industry. He then juxtaposes higher education and manufacture as city development strategies, claiming that the charisma and agency of universities might hold the key to rust-belt revival. An unusual book, beautifully written and keenly observed, I recommend it to those who think about the possible even against a backdrop of broken dreams. — Robert Morrell, Research Professor in the Vice-Chancellor’s Office, University of Cape Town
ISBN: 9781611863451
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
358 pages