Theorists & Thinkers
Space & Place
Urban Methods
Cities in Context
100

This French sociologist argued that taste operates as a social classifier

Pierre Bourdieu

100

This French term describes the leisurely urban wanderer who strolls through the city as a detached observer, taking in the spectacle of modern street life.

The flâneur

100

Lynch used this technique, which asked residents to draw their city from memory to reveal what they noticed, valued, and feared.

Sketch maps (mental mapping)

100

For the first time in human history, this demographic threshold has been crossed: more than half the world's population now lives here

Cities (urban areas)

200

He wrote The Image of the City (1960) and developed the five elements of the mental map.

Kevin Lynch

200

Marc Augé's term for anonymous, temporary, interchangeable spaces like airports, highways, and chain hotels

Non-Places (will also accept liminal space)

200

William H. Whyte's "The Street Life Project" used what innovative method to record pedestrian behavior in New York City plazas over extended periods of time.

Time-lapse photography (will also accept long form videography)

200

The Chicago School treated the city as this kind of setting, where social processes could be observed and theorized.

A social laboratory

300

This scholar coined the term 'informal economy' after studying urban migrants in Accra, Ghana who were not "unemployed", but "differently employed"

Keith Hart

300

Appleton's theory holds that humans evolved preferences for landscapes offering both wide views and sheltered concealment simultaneously. Name the theory

Prospect-Refuge Theory

300

Clifford Geertz's concept, adopted in urban ethnography, layers context, meaning, and interpretation onto description (as seen in Duneier's portrait of sidewalk vendors).It is the difference between a wink and a blink.

Thick Description

300

In 1890, Jacob Riis used photojournalism to expose what social issue in New York City, sparking public outrage.

Urban Poverty in tenement conditions 

400

Loïc Wacquant described this state form — liberal and permissive at the top, punitive and controlling at the bottom — using the image of a mythological creature.

The Centaur State

400

Lynch's five elements of the mental map include paths, edges, districts, and nodes. What is the fifth?

Landmarks

400

Andrew Causey's text "Drawn to See" argues that this practice, sometimes dismissed as unscientific, is actually a rigorous epistemological tool that slows perception and reveals what text cannot.

Urban Sketching (drawing as ethnographic practice)

400

David Harvey, Manuel Castells, and Henri Lefebvre all contributed to this theoretical turn in urban anthropology — making cities understood as shaped by capitalism and class struggle.

The Political Economy Turn (1970s–80s)

500

In de Soto's research, it took this many days to legally register a street business in Lima, Peru in the 1980s — illustrating why informality was a rational choice.

289 days

500

Setha Low studied these privately governed residential developments which are walled, secured, and socially homogeneous, as examples of how urban space physically encodes exclusion and belonging.

Gated communities

500

Susan Sontag argued that photography gives viewers a false sense of this.

True knowledge/understanding of a scene

500

In the 1930s, the Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) produced color-coded maps that designated Black and immigrant neighborhoods as high-risk for mortgage lending, institutionalizing racial segregation in American cities. What is this practice called?

Redlining

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