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Data has emerged as a key component that determines how
interactions across the world are structured, mediated and
represented. This book examines these new data publics and the
areas in which they become operative, via analysis of politics,
geographies, environments and social media platforms. By claiming
to offer a mechanism to translate every conceivable occurrence into
an abstract code that can be endlessly manipulated, digitally
processed data has caused conventional reference systems which
hinge on our ability to mark points of origin, to rapidly implode.
Authors from a range of disciplines provide insights into such a
political economy of data capitalism; the political possibilities
of techno-logics beyond data appropriation and data refusal;
questions of visual, spatial and geographical organization;
emergent ways of life and the environments that sustain them; and
the current challenges of data publics, which is explored via case
studies of three of the most influential platforms in the social
media economy today: Facebook, Instagram and Whatsapp. Data Publics
will be of great interest to academics and students in the fields
of computer science, philosophy, sociology, media and communication
studies, architecture, visual culture, art and design, and urban
and cultural studies.
Data has emerged as a key component that determines how
interactions across the world are structured, mediated and
represented. This book examines these new data publics and the
areas in which they become operative, via analysis of politics,
geographies, environments and social media platforms. By claiming
to offer a mechanism to translate every conceivable occurrence into
an abstract code that can be endlessly manipulated, digitally
processed data has caused conventional reference systems which
hinge on our ability to mark points of origin, to rapidly implode.
Authors from a range of disciplines provide insights into such a
political economy of data capitalism; the political possibilities
of techno-logics beyond data appropriation and data refusal;
questions of visual, spatial and geographical organization;
emergent ways of life and the environments that sustain them; and
the current challenges of data publics, which is explored via case
studies of three of the most influential platforms in the social
media economy today: Facebook, Instagram and Whatsapp. Data Publics
will be of great interest to academics and students in the fields
of computer science, philosophy, sociology, media and communication
studies, architecture, visual culture, art and design, and urban
and cultural studies.
The Popular Economy in Urban Latin America: Informality,
Materiality and Gender in Commerce advances comparative knowledge
and theoretical reflections on urban popular economies in Latin
America by going beyond the lenses of so-called informal and street
economies. It develops a cultural-economic perspective on the
popular urban economy and provides new insights in key concepts
such as informality, materiality, and gender. Based on ethnographic
work and archival research, the authors of this volume address
cases in Brazil, Bolivia, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico and Peru. The
guiding questions of these case studies are: which actors, and with
what agencies, are forming and transforming street markets and
other place-based economies, and with what effects? What are the
emerging lines of tension in these particular economies? Urban
economies in Latin America are becoming increasingly diverse and
internally stratified. Itinerant traders work side-by-side with
permanent street and market vendors, shopkeepers, and wholesalers
who conduct business trips to neighboring countries and China
several times a year. International trade and investment as well as
technological change foster new forms of interaction between
traders, companies and customers, but also create new imbalances in
economic communities. Remaining sensitive to history, gender, and
urban politics, this volume offers an ethnographically informed
cultural and socio-material perspective on how popular economies
and commerce thrive, transform, and persist in Latin American
cities today.
The rapid changes currently taking place in our urban, political
and institutional environments have shifted spatial practice to
centre stage both in civic life and academic research. Social
networking, political projects, cross-border movements, artistic
interventions, urban and environmental initiatives, self-organized
educational practices - all articulate the challenges involved in
organizing the spaces we share. In this volume, visual culture
scholars from around the world discuss the "practical turn" in
different fields of critical engagement, proposing fresh ways to
assert an interpenetrated space of research and intervention.
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