Seeing the City Digitally - Couverture rigide

 
9789463727037: Seeing the City Digitally

Synopsis

This book explores what's happening to ways of seeing urban spaces in the contemporary moment, when so many of the technologies through which cities are visualised are digital. Cities have always been pictured, in many media and for many different purposes. This edited collection explores how that picturing is changing in an era of digital visual culture. Analogue visual technologies like film cameras were understood as creating some sort of a trace of the real city. Digital visual technologies, in contrast, harvest and process digital data to create images that are constantly refreshed, modified and circulated. Each of the chapters in this volume examines a different example of how this processual visuality is reconfiguring the spatial and temporal organisation of urban life.

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À propos des auteurs

Gillian Rose is Professor of Human Geography at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of the British Academy and of the Academy of Social Sciences. She is the author of Feminism and Geography (Polity, 1993), Doing Family Photography (Ashgate, 2010), The New Urban Aesthetic: Digital Experiences of Urban Change written with Monica Degen (Bloomsbury, 2022) and Visual Methodologies (Sage, fifth edition 2022), as well as many papers on images, visualising technologies and ways of seeing in urban, domestic and archival spaces. Her current research interests focus on contemporary digital visual culture.

Sam Hind is Research Associate in SFB1187 Media of Cooperation at the University of Siegen. He is co-editor of Time for Mapping: Cartographic Temporalities (Manchester University Press, 2018) and co-author of Playful Mapping in the Digital Age (Institute for Network Cultures, 2016). He has published in Political Geography, Mobilities, and New Media & Society.

Scott Rodgers is Reader in Media and Geography in the Department of Film, Media and Cultural Studies at Birkbeck, University of London. His research specializes in the relationships of media and cities and the geographies of communication. Scott also has broad interests in social media, journalism, urban politics, phenomenological approaches to media and technology, and ethnographic methodologies. His most recent work focuses on the convergence between digital platforms and the making of contemporary urbanism and locality.

Monica Degen is a Reader in Cultural Sociology at Brunel University London. Her research focuses on the politics of space with a particular interest in the ways sensory, temporal and emotional dimensions underpin urban culture and politics. In 2016 she was awarded a British Academy Fellowship to research "Timescapes of Urban Change". More recently she has been working on developing creative methodologies and digital tools to capture the sense of place of cities and the ways in which urban environments are stratified by power relations; see www.sensorysmithfield.com and www.sensorycities.com. Her forthcoming monograph, A New Urban Aesthetic: Experiencing Urban Change Digitally (with Gillian Rose), explores how digital visualizations are transforming urban experiences.

Isobel Ward is an AHRC-sponsored PhD candidate in the Department of Geography at King's College London. She has carried out research in London amongst communities that are undergoing considerable urban renewal around issues of mobility and migration, place attachment and social ties to look at processes of un-making and re-making home. She has an interest in sensory, visual and digital methodologies to explore emerging urban spatialities.

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Autres éditions populaires du même titre

9781041185895: Seeing the City Digitally

Edition présentée

ISBN 10 :  1041185898 ISBN 13 :  9781041185895
Editeur : Routledge, 2025
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