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Gentrification and the Media -

Gentrification and the Media

Building and Propagating Discourses on Exclusive Urban Change
Buch | Hardcover
294 Seiten
2025
Amsterdam University Press (Verlag)
978-94-6372-099-1 (ISBN)
CHF 199,95 inkl. MwSt
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This collection of case studies focuses on a largely unexplored topic that no book has yet investigated gentrification and the media. There is an emphasis on the theoretical and methodological issues raised when media sources are used to study gentrification by non-media specialists who primarily focus on space and communities.
Gentrification is extensively discussed in the media, where coverage can describe changing neighbourhoods and analyse the causes and consequences of such change. The media are also arenas in which the voices of those who advocate or resist gentrification can be heard. How can this profusion of content be examined? What methods can be used to critically address the role of the media in constructing and propagating discourses on gentrification? Central to this book is the idea that new research should engage with the theoretical and methodological issues that emerge when media products are used as a corpus to study gentrification.

Stéphane Sadoux is a town planner and an historian. He graduated from the Universities of Oxford, Newcastle-upon-Tyne and Grenoble. He is a past Director of Unité de Recherche AE&CC at the Grenoble School of Architecture (ENSAG), Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA). He is currently leading UGA’s Excellence in Architecture programme (LabEx). Marie-Pierre Vincent is a senior lecturer of British studies at Paris 1–Panthéon Sorbonne and affiliated with the European Centre of Sociology and Political Science. Her thesis focused on anti-gentrification resistance in Hoxton/Shoreditch in London (2008–2019). Her work also relates to art and anti-gentrification activism, political discourse and gentrification, and socio-cultural diversity. David Fée is professor of British Studies at the University of Sorbonne Nouvelle in Paris. He specializes in housing policy in the UK. He has co-edited several books including Lessons from the British and French New Towns: Paradise Lost (Emerald, 2021). Louise Dalingwater is professor of British Studies at Sorbonne University, Paris. She specializes in the service sector, notably financial services and public services. Some of her work has looked at the spatial dimension of service industries such as financial service location.

Acknowledgements, 1. Introduction: Gentrification and the Media &–Stéphane Sadoux, Marie-Pierre Vincent, David Fée, Louise Dalingwater, PART 1: Comparing and contrasting discourses on gentrification, 2. The Local and International Press and the Gentrification of Western Leipzig (Germany): Between Promotional Narratives of Social Transformations and Late Discovery of the Negatives Consequences of Gentrification &–Antonin Girardin, 3. Crime and Gentrification in News Reporting &–Aurora Wallace, 4. Discussion &–Martine Drozdz, PART 2: Place-making through evolving narratives, 5. Gentrification as entertainment: New Orleans as seen on HGTV &–Ella Howard, 6. Shaping and diverting public space regulation: newspaper coverage of an eviction in a BID, Washington, DC &–Nacima Baron, 7. Discussion &–Japonica Brown-Saracino, PART 3: Fuelling and orchestrating gentrification, 8. The eviction of ethnicity and class in the media coverage of commercial gentrification in the 18th arrondissement of Paris &–Pierre Joffre, 9. Constructing the authenticity of gentrified districts? Newspaper coverage of Belleville (Paris) and El Raval (Barcelona) &–Marina Montaner, 10. Acknowledging the interplay between religion and gentrification in the press? Muslim enclaves in Goutte d'Or (Paris) and El Raval (Barcelona) &–Victor Albert-Blanco, 11. Discussion &–Yankel Fijalkow, PART 4: Voicing alternative narratives and resisting gentrification, 12. The I am Denver Chief Storytelling Office: critical co-creative media to change the dominant narrative of gentrification? &–Simon Renoir, 13. Citizen journalism and gentrification: local community views and discourses on urban change in Brixton, London, 2011-2022 &–Stéphane Sadoux, 14. Popular vs. independent local newspapers and anti-gentrification resistance: mixed representations of the 2015 Cereal Killer Cafe attack in London &–Marie-Pierre Vincent, 15. Discussion - Matthew Hardy, Conclusion, INDEX.

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Cities and Cultures
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Gewicht 700 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte
Naturwissenschaften Geowissenschaften Geografie / Kartografie
Sozialwissenschaften Kommunikation / Medien Medienwissenschaft
Technik Architektur
Technik Bauwesen
ISBN-10 94-6372-099-5 / 9463720995
ISBN-13 978-94-6372-099-1 / 9789463720991
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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