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Urban Communication
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 262

Urban Communication

City leaders now confront a global competition for economic investment, and urban elites are casting about for strategies that promise to secure a share of this future of global economic growth. However, many of these strategies are largely symbolic in nature. City leaders, for example, compete for the Olympics so they can broadcast spectacular urban vistas to global television audiences. Officials pour public funds into tourist amenities to cultivate an image of vitality and renewal. But how are the local politics of urban redevelopment intertwined with the global politics of circulating vital urban images? Urban Communication brings together scholars from communication, cultural studies, and urban sociology to explore the symbolic dimensions of contemporary city-building, drawing on case studies from around the world.

The Routledge Companion to Urban Media and Communication
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1052

The Routledge Companion to Urban Media and Communication

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-09-23
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  • Publisher: Routledge

The Routledge Companion to Urban Media and Communication traces central debates within the burgeoning interdisciplinary research on mediated cities and urban communication. The volume brings together diverse perspectives and global case studies to map key areas of research within media, cultural and urban studies, where a joint focus on communications and cities has made important innovations in how we understand urban space, technology, identity and community. Exploring the rise and growing complexity of urban media and communication as the next key theme for both urban and media studies, the book gathers and reviews fast-developing knowledge on specific emergent phenomena such as: reading ...

The Urban Communication Reader
  • Language: en

The Urban Communication Reader

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Communication in Postmodern Urban Fiction
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 182

Communication in Postmodern Urban Fiction

We cannot imagine our world without its digital mirror anymore. We communicate to others in mediated ways and even create ourselves through our technological devices, presenting an imagined version of us to the outside world. This book is concerned with precisely this imagination of the self in an increasing digitalized society, going back to the beginning of our digital age, to the peak of postmodernism at the end of the 20th century. Looking at urban fiction from the 1980s to the early 2000s, the journey of fictional protagonists through the streets of (mostly) New York City reveals an anxiety about the loss of self in the virtual, culminating in violence and destruction. From Auster and Ellis to Palahniuk and DeLillo, this book highlights how an increasingly distanced communication triggers the imagination of violence, making it an insightful read for scholars and aficionados of city literature, postmodernism, and communication alike.

Urban Communication Reader IV
  • Language: en

Urban Communication Reader IV

This volume provides a collection of urban communication research that historically examines, presently analyzes, and creatively imagines the future of cities as change agents.

Urban Communication Systems
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 328

Urban Communication Systems

This is a call for more research into urban systems in general and communication patterns in particular within geographically defined units of analysis. It treats the urban system as the focus in its attempt to integrate the literature from communication with other disciplines focusing on cities.

Urban Communication Reader
  • Language: en

Urban Communication Reader

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2010
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Probes different topics from different directions, and direct readers toward a common urban orientation to produce new insights into urban communication. Topics include: changes in the use of urban land; changes in media technology; the impact of events on spaces and places from sports to natural disasters; the urban function of advertising, commerce, health and community attachment; and reflections on the traditional geographical role of streets and amid the newly emerging virtual places created by the internet.

Analysis and Design of Multiple Element Antennas for Urban Communication
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 174

Analysis and Design of Multiple Element Antennas for Urban Communication

This work focuses on the analysis and design of multiple element antennas (MEA) and their interaction with the propagation channel. In particular, attention is given to urban channels and how its information throughput, i.e. capacity, can be improved. With this in mind, this work extends an existing network model of the communication system in order to reduce computation time, investigates the communicational limits of MEA systems and proposes a synthesis method for capacity maximization.

Communicating the City
  • Language: en

Communicating the City

How human meanings, practices and interactions produce and are produced by urban space is the focus of this timely and exciting addition to the study of urban communication. This book explores key intersections of discourse, materiality, technology, mobility, identity and inequality in acts of communication across urban and urbanizing contexts.

Urban Interactions: Communication and Competition in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 442

Urban Interactions: Communication and Competition in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages

"This volume is dedicated to eliciting the interactions between localities across late antique and early medieval Europe and the wider Mediterranean. Significant research has been done in recent years to explore how late "Roman" and post-"Roman" cities, towns and other localities communicated vis-à-vis larger structural phenomena, such as provinces, empires, kingdoms, institutions and so on. This research has contributed considerably to our understanding of the place of the city in its context, but tends to portray the city as a necessarily subordinate conduit within larger structures, rather than an entity in itself, or as a hermeneutical object of enquiry. Consequently, not enough researc...