"It's A Sprawl World After All" is the title of a book by Douglas Morris which examines the relationship between our "sprawling" urban and suburban culture and crime. Here are some of the questions he raises:
- Do you feel unsafe walking at night, even in your own neighborhood?
- Does it seem as if people are increasingly rude, impolite, and even openly hostile?
- Are you surrounded by others, yet you often feel isolated and alone?
If so, this book's for you!
This ground breaking exposé makes the startling connection between suburban sprawl and the violent breakdown in American society, and shows how the fragmented expanses of suburbia twisted the American Dream into a nightmare. Even with all the wealth and opportunity in America, we continue to feel disconnected from community life and leery of any unfamiliar face.
Without small towns bringing people together in communities and keeping them safe, the unplanned growth of sprawl has left Americans isolated, alienated and afraid of the strangers that surround them. As a result, the U.S. now has the most rapes, assaults, murders and serial killings per capita, by a wide margin, than any other first-world nation.
- Ray Oldenburg, author of The Great Good Place and Emeritus Professor of Sociology at The University of West Florida
It's a Sprawl World After All is the first book to connect America's increase in violence and the corresponding breakdown in society, with the post WWII development of the alienating expanses suburbia. Suburbia has substituted cars for conversation, malls for mainstreets, and the artificial community of television for genuine social interaction. All of which has had a dramatically negative impact on U.S. society, including:
- Transforming America's community-oriented small town sensibilities into an isolated society of strangers burdened by loneliness and depression;
- Creating a culture of incivility characterized by extreme individualism and a callous disregard for others; and
- Increasing levels of violence so dramatically as to be proclaimed "epidemic" by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
James Howard Kunstler, renowned urban critic and author of The Geography of Nowhere and Home From Nowhere
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