Flammable Cities: Fire, Urban Environment and Culture in History

Flammable Cities: Fire, Urban Environment and Culture in History

Organizer
German Historical Institute
Venue
Location
Washington, DC
Country
United States
From - Until
15.05.2008 - 17.05.2008
By
Uwe Luebken

This conference will examine the history of uncontrolled fire in large urban settlements. No work to date has taken a global approach to this issue. Research on fire in preindustrial and industrial cities has tended to be limited to treatment in the context of individual urban histories (either of particular great fires or of the growth of firefighting technology) or general treatment of overall trends. The English-language historiography on urban fire history overwhelmingly treats only Europe and the United States. Departing from these narrow methodological and geographical limits should illuminate a host of new issues related to cities and the environment by permitting comparison of differing urban morphologies, types of building material, social systems, cultural attitudes, and methods for coping with disaster.

Programm

Conference at the GHI, May 15-17, 2008:

Flammable Cities:

Fire, Urban Environment and Culture in History

Conveners:

Greg Bankoff (University of Hull, UK)

Uwe Luebken (German Historical Institute, Washington, DC)

Jordan Sand (Georgetown University, Washington, DC)

Program:

Thursday, May 15

6:30 – 8:00 pm
Opening reception at the GHI

Friday, May 16

9:00 – 9:30 am

Introduction: Jordan Sand, Greg Bankoff, Uwe Luebken

9:30 – 11:00 am:

Panel I: Fire & the Early Modern City

Mark C. Molesky (Seton Hall University)
The Great Fire of Lisbon

Hrvoje Petric (University of Zagreb)
Urban Fires in Croatia and Slavonia during Early Modern Times

11:00 am – 11:15 am: Coffee break

11:15 am – 12:45 pm:

Panel II: The Governance of Fire

Samuel J. Martland (Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, Terre Haute, IN)
Valparaíso, Fire, and the Development of Municipal Government in Nineteenth-Century Chile

Jordan Sand (Georgetown University)
The Logic of the Burnable City: Property, Governance and Fire in Edo-Tokyo

12:45 pm – 2:00 pm: Lunch

2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Panel III: Fire & Urban Morphology

Greg Bankoff (University of Hull)
A Tale of Two Cities: The Pyro-morphology of Nineteenth Century Manila

Ayodeji Olukoju (University of Lagos)
Fire Outbreaks in Metropolitan Lagos (Nigeria): Historical and Comparative Perspectives

Jason Gilliland (University of Western Ontario)
Fire and Urban Morphogenesis: Patterns of Destruction and Reconstruction in Nineteenth-Century Montreal.

4:00 pm – 4:30 pm: Coffee break

4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Panel IV: Fire, Fear and the Urban Imagination

Susan Donahue Kuretsky (Vassar College)
The Art of Firefighting: Jan van der Heyden (1637-1712) and his Great Invention

Kristen McCleary (James Madison University)
Flaming the Fears of Theater-Goers: How Fires Shaped the Public Sphere in Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1880 to 1910

Cathy Frierson (University of New Hampshire)
Fire in Russian Cities

Saturday, May 17

9:00 – 11:00 am

Panel V: Containing Fire

Amy S. Greenberg (Penn State University)
From Conflagration to Controlled Burn: The Contested Evolution of Urban Fire Protection in British and Spanish North America, 1750-1900

Shane Ewen (Leeds Metropolitan University)
Constructing Modern Fire Brigades: The Case of Edinburgh’s Great Fire’ of 1824

Sara E. Wermiel (MIT)
Did the Fire Insurance Industry Help Reduce Urban Fires in the United States in the Nineteenth Century?

11:00 am – 11:15 am: Coffee break

11:15 am – 12:45 pm

Panel VI: The Impact of Fire

Andrea Henderson (Stanford University)
Points of Origin: The Social Impact of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire

Dirk Schubert (Hafen City University, Hamburg)
The Hamburg Fire 1842

12:45 pm – 2:00 pm: Lunch

2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Panel VII: The Politics of Fire

Nancy Haekyung Kwak (Polytechnic University, Brooklyn, NY)
The Bukit Ho Swee Fire and the Birth of a Benevolent Singaporean State

Sofia Toufic Shwayri (University of Oxford)
Beirut on Fire: From Traditional Suqs to Modern Shopping Malls

Jérôme Tadié (Institut de recherché pour le dévelopment, Bondy, France)
Fires, Urban Environments and Politics in Contemporary Jakarta (1966-2007)

4:00 pm – 4:30 pm: Coffee break

4:30 pm – 5:30 pm: Final discussion

Contact (announcement)

Uwe Luebken

German Historical Institute, Washington DC
1607 New Hampshire Av. NW, Washington DC, 20009

luebken@ghi-dc.org

http://www.ghi-dc.org/events/conferences/2008/fc/fc.html
Editors Information
Published on
23.04.2008
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