What's the most iconic city in England? If I asked you to name a city in England, what's the first one you'd name? If you were going to tour the country, to see its heart, which city would you have to visit? London, of course. The capital city.

What about France? Paris. The capital city.

Egypt? Cairo. The capital.

China? Bejing/Peking. The capital.

You get the idea. Pick just about any country, and it's the capital. But what about the US? Maybe I'm influenced by proximity, but I'd say that arguably the most iconic city in the country is New York. Which isn't even the capital of the state. (That's Albany. And if you've never heard of it before... I can't say I blame you.) LA is probably the second. Going down the list, there's Boston and Chicago... you'd have a ways to go before you got to D.C. (Or at least so it seems to me.)

Why is that? In part, I guess it's the history of it. Most capitals became capitals because they were major, influential cities. DC was created to be the capital, its location a compromise, moved from more northern proposals (such as New York, already an established major city) to help get the Southern states to pay an even share of the more heavily Northern debts from the Revolutionary War.

Even so, that was two hundred years ago. DC has grown, but not nearly so much (or, arguably, so well) as New York and other cities. Outside of the Federal buildings (Capitol Hill, the National Mall, etc.), it's not a city to really show off. (Which I've always thought was a disappointment and a shame.)

Why has it developed this way? What does it say about us?

Or are my perceptions just skewed? (Though since this mostly is about perceptions, any skewing I might have might just be considered exactly the point...)

From: [identity profile] theblackshadow.livejournal.com


I love DC just as much as I love New York. I'm an art junkie, and I would totally move into places like the National Gallery, the Phillips Collection, and the National Portrait Gallery. But I'm not sure I would have originally found those places on my own, and that's clearly not the case in NYC. You can't sneeze without reading about a famous place in the media. In D.C. the food is also awesome, the monuments are awesome...but it's hard for me to tell my visiting friends, "Sure! Go to D.C. first instead of New York!" There's just too much hype about NYC, and too many well-publicized places that people will feel like they missed out on. There are a lot of cool things in NYC, but I also blame the crap media (as usual :P) for not seeking out the cool things to do in our capital city.

Me? You can find me still drooling over the Cezanne collection at the Phillips. :D
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