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List of Figures
List of Tables
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Planning for AuthentiCITIES

PART I Mooring Authenticity
1 Chinatown, not Coffeetown: Authenticity and Placemaking in Vancouver’s Chinatown
2 Neighbourhood Authenticity and Sense of Place
3 Urban Authenticity as a Panacea for Urban Disorder? Business Improvement Areas, Cultural Power, and the Worlds of Justification
4 A Framework of Neighbourhood Authenticity for Urban Planning: Three Aspects and Three Types of Change
5 Negotiating Diversity: The Transitioning Greektown of Baltimore City, Maryland
6 Planning and Authenticity: A Materialist and Phronetic Perspective

PART II Performing Authenticity
7 Authenticity Makes the City: How “the Authentic” Affects the Production of Space
8 Authenticity’s Many Performances in the Urban Studies Literature
9 Tactical Urbanism as the Staging of Social Authenticity
10 Sincerity, Performative Authenticity, and Tourism in New Orleans
11 Gardening in America
12 Utilizing Comical Mascots (Yuru-kyara) to Create City Authenticity?
13 Authentic Downtown Project: Intentional Community Making in the Digital Age

PART III Healing Authenticity
14 Relocated Authenticity: Placemaking in Displacement in Southern Taiwan
15 Coding the “Authenti-City”: North Harbour and the Arhusgade Quarter, Copenhagen
16 Dialogos for Latino Communities
17 Planning for Reconciliation: Indigenous Authenticity in Community Engagement and Urban Planning in Canadian Cities
18 Urban-Social Imaginaries of Authenticity: And the John Lennon Wall

Index

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Authenticity resonates throughout the urbanizing world. As cities’ commercial corridors and downtowns start to look increasingly the same, and gentrification displaces many original neighborhood residents, we are left with a sense that our cities are becoming "hollowed out," bereft of the multi-faceted connections that once rooted us to our communities. And yet, in a world where change is unrelenting, people long for authentic places. This book examines the reasons for and responses to this longing, considering the role of community development in addressing community and neighbourhood authenticity.

A key concept underscoring planning’s inherent challenges is the notion of authentic community, ranging from more holistic, and yet highly market-sensitive conceptions of authentic community to appreciating how authenticity helps form and reinforce individual identity. Typically, developers emphasize spaces’ monetary exchange value, while residents emphasize neighbourhoods’ use value?including how those spaces enrich local community tradition and life. Where exchange value predominates, authenticity is increasingly implicated in gentrification, taking us further from what initially made communities authentic. The hunger for authenticity grows, in spite and because of its ambiguities. This edited collection seeks to explore such dynamics, asking alternately, "How does the definition of ‘authenticity’ shift in different social, political, and economic contexts?" And, "Can planning promote authenticity? If so, how and under what conditions?" It includes healthy scepticism regarding the concept, along with proposals for promoting its democratic, inclusive expression in neighbourhoods and communities.



This book sheds new light in considering the role of community planning in addressing community and neighbourhood authenticity.