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Fr. 207.00
Attili, Attili, Giovanni Attili, Leoni Sandercock, Leonie Sandercock
Multimedia Explorations in Urban Policy and Planning - Beyond the Flatlands
English · Paperback / Softback
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Description
The book is a collection of essays exploring the potential of multimedia to enrich and transform the planning field. By multimedia the authors refer to a broad range of new information and communication technologies (from film and video to digital ethnography and the internet), which are opening up new possibilities in planning practices, processes, pedagogy and research. The authors document the ways in which these ICTs can expand the language of planning and the creativity of planners; can evoke the lived experience (the spirit, memories, desires) of our 21st century mongrel cities by engaging with stories and storytelling; and can democratise planning practices.
The text is epistemologically radical, in presenting an argument for the importance of "multiple languages" (ways of knowing) in the planning field, and making the connection between this epistemology and the almost infinite potential of Multimedia to provide varied tools to accomplish this transformation, displacing the supremacy of the rational, linear and hierarchical with more open, playful and imaginative approaches. Each of the authors brings practical experience with different forms of Multimedia use and reflects on the different potentialities offered by Multimedia for critical intervention in urban and regional issues, and the power dynamics embedded in such interventions.
List of contents
ETHNOGRAPHY, EPISTEMOLOGY, HISTORY.- Film Works Wonders: Analysis, History and Town Plan United in a Single Representation.- From the Campfire to the Computer: An Epistemology of Multiplicity and the Story Turn in Planning.- Beyond the Flatlands: Digital Ethnographies in the Planning Field.- CONTEMPORARY PRACTICES.- Mobilizing the Human Spirit: An Experiment in Film as Social Research, Community Engagement and Policy Dialogue.- (Re)Presenting the Street: Video and Visual Culture in Planning.- Digital Media and the Politics of Disaster Recovery in New Orleans.- Social Justice and Video: Imagining as a Right in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.- "The Beginning of Something": Using Video as a Tool in Community Engagement.- "La Campagna che si fa Metropoli": Film as Discovery.- Representations of an Unsettled City: Hypermedial Landscapes in Rome.- Seeing and Being Seen: The Potential of Multimedia as a Reflexive Planning Methodology.- TEACHING WITH/THROUGH MULTIMEDIA IN PLANNING AND DESIGN.- Participatory Design and Howard Roark: The Story of the Detroit Collaborative Design Center.- Learning as an Aesthetic Experience: Digital Pedagogies in Planning Didactics.- Cinema and the "City of the Mind": Using Motion Pictures to Explore Human-Environment Transactions in Planning Education.- Stinging Real! Four Essays on the Transformative Power of Films and Storytelling in Planning Education.- Conclusions.
About the author
Leonie Sandercock is the author of ten books, the most recent of which include Towards Cosmopolis: Planning for Multicultural Cities (1998) and Cosmopolis 2: Mongrel Cities of the 21st Century (2003). The latter book won the Paul Davidoff Award for best book awarded by the American Collegiate Schools of Planning. She also received the Dale Prize for Community Planning (2005), and the BMW Award for Intercultural Learning (2007), for her paper on 'Cosmopolitan Urbanism'. She co-authored with Giovanni Attili the book and DVD package Where Strangers become Neighbours: Integrating Immigrants in Vancouver, Canada (Springer, 2009).
Giovanni Attili is an Urban Planning PHD, Research Fellow at the University of Rome (La Sapienza) and Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of British Columbia (UBC, Vancouver). He is recipient of the G.Ferraro Award for the best Urban Planning PhD Thesis in Italy in 2005. He is co-editor of the book "Storie di Citta" (Edizioni Interculturali, 2007), author of the book "La citta dei migranti" (Jaca Book, 2008) and co-author of the book and DVD package Where Strangers become Neighbours: Integrating Immigrants in Vancouver, Canada (Springer, 2009).
Summary
The book is a collection of essays exploring the potential of multimedia to enrich and transform the planning field. By multimedia the authors refer to a broad range of new information and communication technologies (from film and video to digital ethnography and the internet), which are opening up new possibilities in planning practices, processes, pedagogy and research. The authors document the ways in which these ICTs can expand the language of planning and the creativity of planners; can evoke the lived experience (the spirit, memories, desires) of our 21st century mongrel cities by engaging with stories and storytelling; and can democratise planning practices.
The text is epistemologically radical, in presenting an argument for the importance of "multiple languages" (ways of knowing) in the planning field, and making the connection between this epistemology and the almost infinite potential of Multimedia to provide varied tools to accomplish this transformation, displacing the supremacy of the rational, linear and hierarchical with more open, playful and imaginative approaches. Each of the authors brings practical experience with different forms of Multimedia use and reflects on the different potentialities offered by Multimedia for critical intervention in urban and regional issues, and the power dynamics embedded in such interventions.
Additional text
From the reviews:
“This is a very admirable collection of essays, which greatly advances the intellectual project of treating stories and storytelling as crucial parts of planning and urban transformation. … essays are meritorious, I find several of them to be especially valuable. … the book is well worth reading by anyone interested in this particular frontier. … Sandercock and Attili have provided a very fine piece of work … . I would strongly encourage Sandercock and Attili to expand on this brilliant exploration of the frontier … .” (James Throgmorton, Journal of Planning Education and Research, Vol. 31 (1), 2011)
Report
From the reviews:
"This is a very admirable collection of essays, which greatly advances the intellectual project of treating stories and storytelling as crucial parts of planning and urban transformation. ... essays are meritorious, I find several of them to be especially valuable. ... the book is well worth reading by anyone interested in this particular frontier. ... Sandercock and Attili have provided a very fine piece of work ... . I would strongly encourage Sandercock and Attili to expand on this brilliant exploration of the frontier ... ." (James Throgmorton, Journal of Planning Education and Research, Vol. 31 (1), 2011)
Product details
Assisted by | Attili (Editor), Attili (Editor), Giovanni Attili (Editor), Leoni Sandercock (Editor), Leonie Sandercock (Editor) |
Publisher | Springer Netherlands |
Languages | English |
Product format | Paperback / Softback |
Released | 08.06.2012 |
EAN | 9789400732193 |
ISBN | 978-94-0-073219-3 |
No. of pages | 390 |
Weight | 575 g |
Illustrations | XXXVIII, 390 p. 102 illus., 55 illus. in color. |
Series |
Urban and Landscape Perspectives Urban and Landscape Perspectives |
Subjects |
Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology
> Geosciences
> Geography
C, Geography, Cultural Studies, Urban Planning, Earth and Environmental Science, Regional and Cultural Studies, Regional Cultural Studies, Regional Studies, Regional & area planning, Landscape/Regional and Urban Planning, Regional planning, Human Geography, Culture—Study and teaching |
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