What is one way that city landscapes changed in the beginning of the twentieth century?

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journal article

Landscapes for Whom? The Twentieth-Century Remaking of Brussels

Yale French Studies

No. 102, Belgian Memories (2002)

, pp. 190-206 (17 pages)

Published By: Yale University Press

https://doi.org/10.2307/3090600

https://www.jstor.org/stable/3090600

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Journal Information

Yale French Studies is the oldest English-language journal in the United States devoted to French and Francophone literature and culture. Each volume of essays is conceived and organized by a guest editor or editors around a particular theme or author. The journal welcomes interdisciplinary approaches and receives contributions from scholars and writers from around the world. Recent volumes have been devoted to a wide variety of subjects, among them: Lévinas; Perec; Haiti; Belgium; Crime Fiction; Surrealism; Material Culture in Medieval and Renaissance France; French Education; and Contemporary French and Francophone Cinema.

Publisher Information

Founded in 1908 by George Parmly Day, and his wife Wilhelmina, Yale University Press is one of the oldest and largest American University Presses. By publishing serious works that contribute to a global understanding of human affairs, Yale University Press aids in the discovery and dissemination of light and truth, lux et veritas, which is a central purpose of Yale University.

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