Scene Thinking
Routledge (Verlag)
9780367028466 (ISBN)
In a series of focused case studies – ranging across practices like drag kinging, Bangladeshi underground music, urban arts interventions and sites like single performance venues, urban neighbourhoods in various states of gentrification, and virtual networks of game consoles in countless living rooms – the authors demonstrate how ‘scene thinking’ can enrich cultural studies inquiry. As a humanistic, empirically oriented alternative to network-based social ontologies, thinking in terms of scenes sensitizes researchers to complex, fluid processes that are nonetheless anchored and made meaningful at the level of lived experience. This book was originally published as a special issue of Cultural Studies.
Benjamin Woo is Assistant Professor in the School of Journalism and Communication Studies at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada. He studies the social worlds of contemporary ‘geek culture’, with a particular focus on the producers, intermediaries, and audiences oriented to comic books and graphic novels. Stuart R. Poyntz is Associate Professor in the School of Communication at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada. His research addresses children’s media cultures, theories of public life, and urban youth media production. He is President of the Association for Research in the Cultures of Young People. Jamie Rennie is an instructor in the Communications Department at Douglas College, Vancouver, Canada. His research focuses on media literacy in Canadian schools and the various pedagogical approaches to teaching about and through contemporary media.
Scene Thinking: Introduction 1. Border Scenes: Detroit ± Windsor 2. ‘We Weren’t Hip, Downtown People’: The Kids in the Hall, the Rivoli and the Nostalgia of the Queen West Scene 3. When Scenes Fade: Methodological Lessons from Sydney’s Drag King Culture 4. Copy Machines and Downtown Scenes: Deterritorializing Urban Culture in a Pre-Digital Era 5. Little Big Scene: Making and Playing Culture in Media Molecule’s Little Big Planet 6. Approaching the Underground: The Production of Alternatives in the Bangladeshi Metal Scene 7. The Power of Scenes: Quantities of Amenities and Qualities of Places 8. Bodies that Remember: Gleaning Scenic Fragments of a Brothel District in Yokohama 9. Some things a Scene might be: Postface
| Erscheinungsdatum | 08.01.2019 |
|---|---|
| Verlagsort | London |
| Sprache | englisch |
| Maße | 156 x 234 mm |
| Gewicht | 400 g |
| Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Geschichte |
| Sozialwissenschaften ► Kommunikation / Medien ► Medienwissenschaft | |
| Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie ► Allgemeines / Lexika | |
| ISBN-13 | 9780367028466 / 9780367028466 |
| Zustand | Neuware |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
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