Ecologies of Affect
Editat de Tonya K Davidson, Ondine Park, Rob Shieldsen Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 mai 2011
Bazându-ne pe analiza datelor furnizate de Wilfrid Laurier University Press, descoperim în Ecologies of Affect o sinteză riguroasă dedicată dinamicii resimțite a orașelor și caracterului locurilor. Remarcăm o abordare interdisciplinară care refuză să trateze spațiul doar prin prisma proprietăților sale materiale, propunând în schimb o analiză a modului în care „virtualitățile” — precum nostalgia, memoria și speranța — fundamentează realitatea socială. Structura volumului este una progresivă, organizată în trei piloni fundamentali: Nostalgie, Dorință și Speranță. Această organizare permite cititorului să urmărească modul în care afectele modelează identitatea urbană, de la studiile despre politica nostalgiei în fosta RDG, până la mecanismele dorinței în suburbiile contemporane sau transformările urbane din Rusia post-sovietică. Putem afirma că acest volum reprezintă o evoluție firească în opera editorului Tonya K Davidson, care în lucrarea sa anterioară, Tours Inside the Snow Globe, explora monumentele din Ottawa nu ca simple artefacte, ci ca participanți activi la viața urbană. Aici, perspectiva este extinsă la nivel global și teoretic, investigând modul în care imaginarul colectiv refractă atașamentele noastre față de loc. Ca alternativă la Imagining Cities pentru cursurile de sociologie urbană sau geografie culturală, Ecologies of Affect aduce avantajul unei focalizări specifice pe „afect” ca forță de producție a spațiului, integrând discuții despre bunurile imateriale care au căpătat o valoare crescută în societățile contemporane. Ritmul textelor este unul academic, dar ancorat în exemple concrete, oferind un echilibru între teoria critică și observația empirică a peisajelor urbane în schimbare.
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 155458258X
Pagini: 360
Ilustrații: b/w illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 226 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
De ce să citești această carte
Recomandăm această carte studenților și practicienilor din sociologie, geografie și studii culturale care doresc să înțeleagă forța invizibilă a emoțiilor în planificarea și trăirea spațiului urban. Cititorul câștigă o perspectivă nouă asupra modului în care speranța sau nostalgia nu sunt simple stări subiective, ci instrumente reale care „construiesc” orașele în care trăim. Este o resursă esențială pentru a descifra complexitatea identităților locale într-o lume tot mai digitalizată și imaterială.
Despre autor
Tonya K. Davidson, alături de Ondine Park și Rob Shields, coordonează acest volum aducând o expertiză solidă în sociologia spațiului și a culturii. Davidson este cunoscută pentru cercetările sale asupra memoriei colective și a rolului monumentelor în peisajul urban, teme explorate pe larg în context canadian. Rob Shields deține o contribuție semnificativă în studiul spațiilor urbane și al culturii consumului, fiind recunoscut pentru analizele sale asupra locurilor „marginale”. Împreună, editorii propun un cadru teoretic ce reflectă preocupările lor comune pentru intersecția dintre sociologie, geografie și studiile afectului, oferind o voce coerentă mediului academic nord-american.
Descriere scurtă
Cuprins
Ecologies of Affect: Placing Nostalgia, Desire, and Hope, edited by Tonya Davidson, Ondine Park, and Rob Shields
List of Figures
Introduction | Ondine Park, Tonya K. Davidson, and Rob Shields
Section I: Nostalgia
1. "Not everything was good, but many things were better": Nostalgia for East Germany and Its Politics | Anne Winkler
2. Nostalgia and Postmemories of a Lost Place: Actualizing "My Virtual Homeland" | Tonya Davidson
3. Placing Nostalgia: The Process of Returning and Remaking Home | Allison Hui
4. From Disease to Desire: The Afflicted Amalgamation of Music and Nostalgia | Mickey Vallee
Section II: Desire
5. The Tourist Affect: Escape and Syncresis on the Las Vegas Strip | Rob Shields
6. (In)Human Desiring and Extended Agency | Matthew Tiessen
7. Cityscapes of Desire: Urban Change in Post-Soviet Russia | Olga Pak
8. Illustrating Desires: The Idea and the Promise of the Suburb in Two Children's Books | Ondine Park
Section III: Hope
9. The Virtual Places of Childhood: Hope and the Micro-Politics of Race at an Inner City Youth Centre | Bonar Buffam
10. Virtual Resurrections: Che Guevara's Image as Place of Hope | Maria-Carolina Cambre
11. Performing Spaces of Hope: Street Puppetry and the Aesthetics of Scale | Petra Hroch
12. The Spatial Distribution of Hope In and Beyond Fort McMurray | Sara Dorow and Goze Dogu
13. Spectacular Enclosures of the Hope: Artificial Islands in the Gulf and the Present | Mark S. Jackson and Veronica della Dora
Conclusion: A Roundtable on the Affective Turn | Rob Shields, Ondine Park, Tonya Davidson, and the Contributors
List of Contributors
Index
Contributors' Bios
Bonar Buffam is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Sociology at the University of British Columbia. His research explores the racial intersections of law, civility, and the public life of urban spaces. His current research project documents the racial publics and geographies that emerge through the circulation of texts about illicit urban economies in Vancouver and Chicago. His work also appears in Law, Text, Culture (2009) and Social Identities (forthcoming). He can be reached at hbuffam@interchange.ubc.ca.
Maria-Carolina Cambre is a doctoral student in Educational Policy Studies at the University of Alberta. Her dissertation research is titled "The Politics of the Face: Manifestations of Che Guevara's Image and Its Renderings, Progeny, and Agency." Conceptually, this thesis has transported her to other places such as the disciplinary interstices between art, sociology, and anthropology and methodologically to the Shangri-La between phenomenology, semiotics, and arts-based research. Virtually, she can be found here: http://www.ualberta.ca/~mcambre/.
Tonya K. Davidson is a Ph.D. candidate in Sociology at the University of Alberta. Her research interests include cultural memory, material culture, and the built environment. Her dissertation research is on the dynamic social lives of a series of monuments in Ottawa, Ontario. Tonya is currently teaching in the Sociology department at King's University College, the University of Western Ontario. She can be found at http://www.tonya-davidson.ca.
Veronica della Dora is Lecturer in Geographies of Knowledge at the School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol. She is the author of Imagining Mount Athos: Visions of a Holy Place from Homer to World War II (University of Virginia Press, 2011) and co-editor with Denis Cosgrove of High Places: Cultural Geographies of Mountains, Ice, and Science (IB Tauris, 2008). Her research interests and publications span cultural and historical geography, history of cartography, Byzantine and post-Byzantine studies, and science studies.
Goze Dogu is a Ph.D. candidate in Sociology at the University of Alberta. Her research interests are diverse and include petro-capitalism and "oil culture," political economy of immigration and racialization, politics/policies of food, and critical analysis of public policy. Her dissertation research is on the problematization of natural resources in Alberta's oil and gas royalty and tax framework, and attempts to theorize the discursive knowledges and technologies around nature and valuation of natural resources. She can be reached at gdogu@ualberta.ca.
Sara Dorow is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Alberta. She heads a SSHRC-funded research project on the challenges and possibilities for "community" in Fort McMurray, Alberta, at the heart of the largest oil industrial development in the world. She is also the author of Transnational Adoption: A Cultural Economy of Race, Gender, and Kinship (New York University Press, 2006). Dr. Dorow may be reached at sdorow@ualberta.ca.
Petra Hroch is a Ph.D. student in Sociology (Theory and Culture) at the University of Alberta. Her doctoral work is supported by a SSHRC Joseph- Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship, Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Scholarship, and Ralph Steinhauer Award of Distinction. Petra's research interests include art, design and aesthetic theory, environmental ethics, and social and political theory. Her work has been featured in Walter Benjamin and the Aesthetics of Change (Palgrave Macmillan,2010).
Allison Hui is a Ph.D. student and Commonwealth Scholar in the Department of Sociology at Lancaster University, UK. Her work examines how what people do and where they do it are intertwined, bringing together theories of mobilities and of practices in an empirical study of leisure pursuits. She is also involved in the ESRC-sponsored Social Change, Climate Change working parties, and is a convenor for the British Sociological Association's Postgraduate Forum. She can be reached at a.hui@lancaster.ac.uk.
Mark Jackson is a Lecturer in Postcolonial Geographies at the University of Bristol. His research interests and publications lie at the intersections between philosophy and social theory, post-colonialism, urban studies, social history, political ecology, and visual studies.
Olga Pak is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Sociology at the University of Alberta. Her research interests pertain to social imaginary, nostalgia, urban ethics and aesthetics, social history and cultural studies of Soviet and post-Soviet Russia. Olga's dissertation project explores post-Soviet urban transformations in Russia. She can be contacted at pak.olga@gmail.com.
Ondine Park is a Ph.D. candidate in Sociology at the University of Alberta and a researcher at the City-Region Studies Centre. She is interested in contemporary exemplars of the "normal": social, cultural, and spatial practices and forms that are ubiquitous, taken for granted, and normative. Her research interrogates the ways these are represented and reproduced, and how they are imagined or wished to be normal. Her current work focuses on desire, the idea, and promise of the suburban good life. http://www.ualberta.ca/~opark.
Rob Shields is Henry Marshall Tory Chair and Professor in the Departments of Sociology and Art and Design, University of Alberta. He is founder and co-editor of the journal Space and Culture, and founder of Curb magazine. His most recent works include What Is a City? Rethinking the Urban after Katrina (ed., with Phil Steinberg, University of Georgia Press, 2008) and Building Tomorrow: Innovation in Construction (ed. with André Manseau, Ashgate, 2005). He directs the City-Region Studies Centre.
Matthew Tiessen completed his doctorate in Critical Theory and Visual Culture at the University of Alberta with the support of a SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship and Killam Memorial Scholarship. Matthew's research engages theories of digital and visual culture, mobility, virtuality, and ethics. His writing has been featured in CTheory; Rhizomes: Cultural Studies in Emerging Knowledge; Space and Culture; Pli: The Warwick Journal of Philosophy; and What Is a City? Rethinking the Urban after Hurricane Katrina (University of Georgia Press, 2008). Matthew teaches in the Communication Studies department at Wilfrid Laurier University.
Mickey Vallee received his Ph.D. from the University of Alberta, where he now teaches courses in sociology and music. He is currently co-editing a hypertext glossary of terms by Deleuze and Guattari with Rob Shields (http://www.deleuzeguattari.com) while writing a book on Lacan and the virtual structures of recorded music. He is delighted to see this anthology released just after the birth of his second daughter, Anouk.
Anne Winkler is a Ph.D. candidate in Sociology at the University of Alberta. She is interested in commemorative practices in the post-socialist context. In her dissertation project, Anne examines the representation of East Germany in museums. She may be reached at awinkler@ualberta.ca.