New to this edition
Readership: All those interested in the contemporary history of London, Britain in the 1980s, the impact of Thatcherism, and the heritage industry in British culture
"The chapter on the national trust is among the best and most original writing...I've ever read." - Vera Rule, The Guardian
Going Back to Dalston: Preface to the Oxford Edition Part One: The Undemolished World of Dalston Lane 1: Street-Corner Vision 2: Around the World in Three Hundred Yards 3: All Cats are Grey by Night 4: Down in the Dirt 5: Dalston Lane Becomes a Downland Track Part Two: Brideshead and the Tower Blocks 6: Brideshead Relocated 7: Abysmal Heights 8: Rodinsky's Place 9: An Unexpected Reprieve Part Three: Scenes from the Privatized City 10: The London Bus Queue Falls Apart 11: The Vandalized Telephone Box 12: The Man with a Metal Detector 13: Drinking Water in a Toxic State Part Four: Tales of Conversion 14: The Park that Lost its Name 15: Remembering London's War 16: The Bow Quarter: Six Hundred and Seventy Luxury Flats in an Old Victorian Hell-House Part Five: Visions of the New Dawn 17: Excellence: From Fifth Avenue to Hackney Town Hall 18: Refounding the City with Prince Charles Afterwards... 19: Down Among the Gentrifiers 20: A Night to Remember 21: Brick Lane's Day of Killing 22: Don Giovanni (and Business Planning) Come to the Hackney Empire 23: Siraj Izhar's public lavatory Notes Index