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  • Postmodern Cities and Spaces

    Postmodern Cities and Spaces by Watson, Sophie; Gibson, Katherine;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Blackwell Publishers (Wiley)
    • Date of Publication 16 December 1994

    • ISBN 9780631194040
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages288 pages
    • Size xx0 mm
    • Language English
    • 0

    Categories

    Short description:

    * At the leading edge of cultural and urban studies, this fresh, accessible and provocative collection provides a unique tour of the contemporary - and future - metropolis.

    * Includes contributions from Edward W. Soja and Peter Marcuse.

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    Long description:

    This pioneering and thought-provoking book looks at the influences of discourses of the postmodern on thinking about spatiality, contemporary cities and questions of power in urban life.

    Discourses of the postmodern are having profound effects on a range of urban practices, from philosophy and political economy to architecture and planning. This provocative collection charts the confrontations between a
    postmodern aesthetic (and its influence upon architectural, artistic and cultural styles), a
    socio-economic "condition" of postmodernity (overlain upon a global economic restructuring of space), and a
    postmodern paradigm of knowledge (heavily influenced by poststructuralism).

    Postmodern Cities and Spaces brings together an exciting group of writers and critics from diverse disciplinary and geographical backgrounds. Included in the collection are dynamic perspectives from feminism and psychoanalysis. The book links the architectural and the physical, the aesthetic and the sexual, and the real and imaginary, within a broad discussion of postmodern cities and spaces. The book then examines these urban spaces as a site for "postmodern politics" - in Bombay, in South Africa, in New York and Los Angeles. Incorporating a wide range of focuses for the contemporary urban debate, this is a pioneering contribution to the discourses surrounding postmodernist culture and postfordist space. It is essential reading for anyone interested in urban, cultural or aesthetic studies.



    "An exhilarating roller-coaster of a ride round the globe... Collectively, the essays explore the possibilities of a fruitful politics of postmodern life and culture. Individually, they create rich tapestries out of the contingencies of postmodern spaces and social organizations. What we have is a fragmented cultural study of the power of contemporary spaces and the spaces of contemporary power."
    Lawrence Grossberg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

    "This sparkling collection takes a positive rather than a celebratory approach to the contemporary city. Its intention is to think up new strategies of inclusion which can be used to combat the strategies of exclusion deployed in existing socio-spatial order. These strategies ... are attempts to describe other ways of occupying urban space that multiply possibilities rather than close them down. A particular feature of the collection is its attempt to take in postcolonial situations in cities outside of the standard western examples." Nigel Thrift, University of Bristol


    "Watson and Gibson provide an interdisciplinary forum for debates about the meaning of the term 'postmodern space'.... Many of the essays in Postmodern Cities and Spaces expand traditional ideas of spatial politics by exploring the spaces of subjectivity and representation along with questions of gender, sexuality, class, ethnicity, and race." Rosalyn Deutsche


    "What excites me most about this collection is the diversity of places and social groups it discusses. The book makes important contributions to theoretical and political discussions of city life both in the past and today." Iris M. Young, University of Pittsburgh


    "The seventeen chapters that make up this volume are surprisingly coherent and constitute an up-to-date Reader in contemporary urban studies which is informative, theoretically imaginative and, at most points, a compelling read." Sociological Review


    "The writing is most engaging when the contributors' desire for constructive action combines with meticulous research methods, self-reflexive theory and an interdisciplinary approach, as in the essays by Elizabeth Wilson, John Lechte, Edward W. Sojar and Peter Marcus. For readers interested in the relation of space to politics of identity, privilege and oppression, Postmodern Cities and Spaces offers a variety of scholarly interpretations and , as a whole, maintains an incredulity toward metanarratives, modern and otherwise." C. H. Parachute 81

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction.

    1. Postmodern Spaces, Cities and Politics: An Introduction: Kathie Gibson (Monash University, Australia) and Sophie Watson (University of Sydney, Australia).


    Part I: Postmodern Space: .


    2. Heterotopologies: A Remembrance of Other Spaces in the Citadel-la: Edward Soja (University of California, USA).


    3. Discourse, Discontinuity, Difference: The Question of 'Other' Spaces: Benjamin Genocchio (University of Sydney, Australia).


    4. Women, Chora, Dwelling: Elizabeth Grosz (Monash University, Australia).


    5. The Invisible Flaneur: Elizabeth Wilson (University of North London).


    6. 'Drunk With the Glitter': Consuming Spaces and Sexual Geographies: Gillian Swanson (Griffith University, Australia).


    7.(Not) Belonging in Postmodern Space: John Lechte (Macquarie University, Australia).


    8. Imaginary Cities: Images of Postmodernity: Paul Patton (University of Sydney, Australia).


    Part II: Postmodern Cities:.


    9. Postmodern Urbanization: The Six Restructurings of Los Angeles: Edward Soja (University of California, USA).


    10. Under the Volcano: Postmodern Space in Hong Kong: Alexander Cuthbert (University of New South Wales, Australia).


    11. Gay Nights and Kingston Town: Representations of Kingston, Jamaica: Diane J. Austin-Broos (University of Sydney, Australia).


    12. Distant Places, Other Cities? Urban Life in Contemporary Papua New Guinea: John Connell and John Lea (University of Sydney, Australia).


    Part III: Postmodern Politics: .


    13. On the Problems and Prospects of Overcoming Segregation and Fragmentation in Southern Africa's Cities in the Post-Modern Era: Alan Mabin (University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa).


    14. Postmodern Bombay: Fractured Discourses: Jim Masselos (University of Sydney, Australia).


    15. The Dark Side of Modernisn: Planning as Control of an Ethnic Minority: Oren Yiftachel (Curtin University, Australia).


    16. Not Chaos, But Walls: Postmodernism and the Partitioned City: Peter Marcuse (Columbia University, USA).


    17. Postmodern Politics and Planning: A Postscript: Katherine Gibson (Monash University, Australia) and Sophie Watson (University of Sydney, Australia).

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