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A city is a sacred place where human beings with a common life come together and achieve a high level of culture, science, industry, and government. When people come together and help to support one another instead of living on their own, fighting to survive, they start off as a simple village. A village is small and can only support a certain population, but as population and technology increases and the village advances, it becomes a civilization. There are many different cities throughout history and the world today, and all of them are different by what technology has done for them in their advancements, values, and living styles.[TB1] [TB2] Lewis Mumford expresses his view in The City in History that technology throughout history has aided and hindered the advancements and living styles of the people throughout history[TB3] .

To build a civilization, Mumford started off with the bases of the city, the village and how it comes to be. The Village is where man first came together to live, eat, sleep, and reproduce; however before that, man was a nomadic hunting society that followed its food supply across the land. Man then created the advancement of a reliable food source of agriculture allowed for man to stay in one place. As the human society stopped traveling they were able to build homes, plant crops, and come together building on what they have to create an adobe. This is the start of a village culture; based on rational human values: very close knit, supportive of one neighbor, everyone participating, working together. [TB4]

The small advancement of crops was a major factor in the development of society as it led to the creation of the village. Without the creation of the village, h...

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... around to the wonderful megalopolis to enjoy it but as it advanced too quickly to provide for itself it became overrun. Not enough work was being provided in society as it began to build itself up and nothing was able to be done to control itself.

To provide for oneself, society offered itself up, it insure its existence, however crippling itself in the act. This thriving megalopolis became Mumford’s Coketown, very well described in Upton Sinclair’s novel The Jungle as the city of Packingtown. Packing town was dirty, congested, and had poor living conditions. The town’s main source of work was done in factories, and people lived in what was referred to as the slums. Companies hired workers on wage labor, barely paying enough for someone to survive. Society lost all rational human values it had and fixated on the need to survive with machine values.

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