Communication, Culture, and Making Meaning in the City

Ethnographic Engagements in Urban Environments

Contributions by Emma Agusita, Eric Aoki, Julia Aoki, Jon Dovey, Craig L. Engstrom, Kathleen M. German, Joy Yang Jiao, Ryan M. Lescure, Jolene Mairs Dyer, Shawn Sobers, Martin Whiteford, Ayaka Yoshimizu, Joanna Zielinska Edited by Ahmet Atay, Jay Brower

Hardback - £90.00

Publication date:

10 October 2017

Length of book:

242 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

238x157mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781498531931

As communicative, cultural, and political spaces, cities present a vast array of racial, ethnic, national, sexual, and socioeconomic experiences around which human communities take shape. This shaping forms a germinal point of mass cultural life. City planners decide where buildings and neighborhoods are developed, which ultimately affects who residents interact with, how they get there, and why they choose city life. From these experiences, boundaries and possibilities arise that define cultures of “the city.” In Communication, Culture, and Making Meaning in the City: Ethnographic Engagements in Urban Environments, contributors focus on theorizing the notion of “the city” as a communicatively constituted cultural space, drawing on situated, reflexive ethnographic examinations of “the city” to show the complex and varied ways in which cities produce social meaning.
Atay and Brower have brought together compelling ethnographic accounts from a variety of fascinating cities. The communicative dimensions of urban spaces are revealed through the interpretation and critique of human existence where planning and order meet improvisation and fluidity.