The Public Realm
âThe public realmâ in America has two roles: âit is the dwelling place of our civilization and our civic life, and it is the physical manifestation of the common good. When you degrade the public realm, you will automatically degrade the quality of your civic life and the character of all the enactments of your public life and communal life that take place thereâïŒKunstler 523ïŒ. In James Howard Kunstlerâs essay âThe Public Realm and The Common Goodâ in his book New Urbanism, he explains the relationship between the âpublic realmâ and the âcommon goodâ(521,523). âPublic realmâ should be a public space that groups live and public interestâs shows. However, the pattern of public realm seems to let the United States become not worth concern. By using Rosenwasserâs definitions of moment; âthe historical and cultural context of a pieceâ, complaint; âwhat the piece is reacting to or worried aboutâ, and pitch; or âwhat the piece wishes you to believeâ, the following essay will show how Kunstler accepts that the âcommon goodâ can improve âcivic lifeâ. Furthermore, this paper will discuss the degradation of âcivic lifeâ and the relationship of âchronological connectivityâ to the âcommon goodâ and non-consumerism. (Rosenwasser 111,Kunstler 521,523)
Applying Rossenwasserâs definition of âmomentâ, Kunstlerâs words can be understood much more clearly. As far as Kunstler is concerned, the moment is about the Grand Union Hotel in New York during the late 1980âs all the way through the 90âs. Kunstler emphasizes, âWhat happened to the interrelation of healthy, living patterns of human ecology in the town where I live has happened all over the countryâ (524). âWhere I live, Saratoga Springs, New York, there once existed a magnificent building called the Grand Union Hotelâ(524). It was torn down and is now a strip mall. However, after 1953 the good relations between the street and the building began to degrade because new strip mall bore no historical relation to the street. âHistorically Americans have low regard for the public realmâ(523).
Rosenwasser defines âcomplaintâ as âwhat the piece is reacting to or worried aboutâ (111). According to Kunstlerâs argument âCivic life is what goes on in the public realm. Civic life refers to our relations with our