?Readers who have ever puzzled over the movement of
particular discourses or knowledge systems from one urban context
to another, or between otherwise disparate groups, will find in
this volume an exhaustive and compelling effort to theorize the
development, movement, and effects of learning ? Its
revelatory power is arguably profound: for McFarlane, it promises
nothing short of understanding the power to forge a different kind
of city. In the 21st century city, the material and analytical
stakes of learning could not be higher.? (Antipode, 1
September 2013)
?This book is a significant step in bringing learning to
the core of urban study ? This volume?s detailed
fieldwork effectively supports its desire to see learning occupy a
central place in the production of more socially just
urbanisms.? (Area, 1 May 2013)
?Learning the City is a critical academic
contribution useful for scholars of the field ... It is sure
to become indispensable for academics of the
discipline.? (Geography Helvitica, 1 December
2012)
"Through
Learning the City McFarlane has made a major
contribution to our understandings of the urban. In its commitment
to the diverse and lively practices through which the city is
learned and known, in its engagement with the diverse forms of
agency and political practices through which agency is assembled
and re-assembled the book enlivens understandings of spatial
politics. It is also a text that is animated by a powerful sense of
hope that cities might come to bere-assembled in different ways
that are more equitable and more open to different agentic forces
and contributions." (
Society and Space, 1 November 2012)
"In Learning the City, McFarlane successfully manages to
open the black box of urban learning in widening the perspective to
acknowledge diverse urban learning practices, which may even bear a
transformative potential in certain contexts." (International
Planning Studies, 23 October 2012)
"Learning the City is an important and theoretically
sophisticated piece of work. It is like a good movie: you need to
re-view it in your mind several times to position yourself ...
McFarlane?s innovative theory of urban learning is very
helpful to an understanding of contemporary urbanism and of how it
can be changed for the better. Its great merit is to make us see
cities as complex learning assemblages and milieus." (Urban
Geography, 34.1)
?A wonderfully insightful book that rewards careful
attention and deserves a wide readership ... A powerful framework
for re-thinking issues of poverty, urban informality and
development in the Global South.? (Singapore Journal of
Tropical Geography 34 (2013))
?A rich and perceptive account of how we dwell in and
learn about cities and what it takes to live an urban life ?
McFarlane?s book forces us to review the conceptual tools we
have in the planning field for ?getting to know? what
cities are like and how urban life is experienced.? (Patsy
Healey, Planning Theory & Practice, 14:2)
?Urbanism, McFarlane believes, needs a theory of learning;
throughout his book he builds a very sophisticated one?[he]
brings us closer to the material stuff of urban life and
politics?a kind of urbanism in motion, whereby what we come
to term ?knowledge?, ?infrastructure? and
?resources? are never simply ?there?, but
must be translated, distributed, coordinated, perceived and
inhabited?. (International Journal of Urban and Regional
Research, Volume 38.1, January 2014).