"This wonderful book brings a fresh perspective to urban studies. Connecting cultural understanding to policy decisions about commerce, housing, gay rights, and environmental questions, it thoughtfully probes how transformations to the identity of space, and changes to life-styles and the movements they foster alter the self-consciousness of urban residents and remake political possibilities."
Ira Katznelson, Columbia University
"Cogently written and thoroughly researched, this ground-breaking book offers a new paradigm in understanding urban economic development and progressive policy. Rosdil has persuasively identified the conditions under which nontraditional cultural movements shape major city policies."
Kenneth Wong, Brown University