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The Address Book

The Address Book: What Street Addresses Reveal About Identity, Race, Wealth, and Power

The Address Book: What Street Addresses Reveal About Identity, Race, Wealth, and Power


Deirdre Mask

Journalist Mask’s wonderful and wide-ranging debut investigates the records of avenue addresses and their “strength to determine who counts, who doesn’t, and why.” A brilliant storyteller, Mask describes the “multisensory maps” historical Romans used to navigate their town and the origins of avenue names in medieval England (Frying Pan Alley became domestic to ironmongers; Booty Lane became “named both after bootmakers, Viking booty, or the Booty family”). 


 Shifting from the historic report to the cutting-edge world, Mask files efforts to assign avenue addresses withinside the slums of Kolkata, India, and takes readers to Japan, in which towns are prepared through blocks and the absence of avenue names makes navigation challenging. 

Other subjects encompass the origins of the cutting-edge postal system, virtual addresses of the future, and the problems confronted through homeless humans in an technology while a domestic deal with is “a manner for society to test which you aren't simply someone however the man or woman you assert you are.” Mask’s fluid narration and surprising studies discover the significance of an factor of every day existence that maximum humans take for granted, and he or she profiles a extraordinary array of activists, historians, and artists whose paintings intersects with the evolution and which means of avenue addresses. This evocative records casts its situation in an entire new light.


The Address Book: What Street Addresses Reveal About Identity, Race, Wealth, and Power

1 comentario:

  1. An impressive book-length answer to a question few of us consider: "Why do street addresses matter?" In her first book, Mask combines deep research with skillfully written, memorable anecdotes to illuminate the vast influence of street addresses as well as the negative consequences of not having a fixed address....Throughout this eye-opening book, the author clearly demonstrates that package deliveries constitute a minuscule part of the significance of addresses―not only today, but throughout human history....A standout book of sociological history and current affairs.”―Kirkus Review (starred)

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