Description
Feng Shui and the City analyses the past and contemporary influences of traditional geomancy on Chinese built environments across three domains: domestic spaces, spaces of commercial development and the public realm. Using Lefebvre’s notion of absolute and abstract space—spaces of ‘symbolic existence’ and ‘everyday life’ versus spaces of domination and control, it tracks evolving attachment to, and use of, Feng Shui in Guangdong and Hong Kong. The book seeks to understand the changing role of Feng Shui in modern urban development and its regulation, and to question what constitutes authentic Feng Shui today.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Feng Shui and the ‘Meaning of Space’.- Chapter 2: The Case Studies and Research Approach.- Chapter 3: Feng Shui in Mainland China – Guangdong Province.- Chapter 4: Feng Shui in the Chinese territories – Hong Kong.- Chapter 5: Conclusions.



