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Data mining provides a set of new techniques to integrate,
synthesize, and analyze tdata, uncovering the hidden patterns that
exist within. Traditionally, techniques such as kernel learning
methods, pattern recognition, and data mining, have been the domain
of researchers in areas such as artificial intelligence, but
leveraging these tools, techniques, and concepts against your data
asset to identify problems early, understand interactions that
exist and highlight previously unrealized relationships through the
combination of these different disciplines can provide significant
value for the investigator and her organization.
The Metaphysical City examines the metaphorical existence of the
city as an entity to further understand its significance on urban
planning and geography. It encourages an open-minded approach when
studying cities so as to uncover broader connecting themes that may
otherwise be missed. Case studies of New York, Paris, Cairo,
Mumbai, Tokyo, and Los Angeles explore a metaphor specific to each
city. This multidisciplinary analysis uses philosophical treatises,
geographical analysis, and comparative literature to uncover how
each city corresponds to the metaphor. As such, it allows the
reader to understand the city from six differing points of view.
This book would be beneficial to students and academics of urban
planning, geography, and comparative literature, in particular
those with an interest in a metaphysical examination of cities.
In the latter part of the C20th, a series of seminal books were
written which examined Los Angeles by the likes of Reyner Banham,
Mike Davis, Edward Soja, Allen Scott, Michael Dear, Frederick
Jameson, Umberto Eco, Bernard-Henri Levy, and Jean Baudrillard
which have been hugely influential in thinking about cities more
broadly. The debates which were generated by these works have
tended to be very heated and either defensive or offensive in
approach. A sufficient amount of time has since passed that a more
measured approach to evaluating this work can now be taken. The
first section of this book, 'Contra This and Contra That', provides
such a critique of the various theories applied to Los Angeles
during the last century, balancing the positive with the negative.
The second part of the book is an investigation of L.A. as it
exists on the ground today. While political, the theoretical stance
taken in this investigation is not mounted as a platform from which
to advocate a particular ideology. Instead, it encompasses cultural
as well as economic issues to put forth a view of L.A. which is
coherent and cogent while at the same time considering its
multi-layed, complex and ever-changing qualities. It concludes by
arguing that sectored off and 'totalizing' visions of the city will
not do as instruments of urban analysis and that only a theory as
mobile as its target will do: one that replicates the polymer
nature of this place. It proposes that, extending that theory to
the world beyond this particular city, only a theory that models
itself on the mobile and polymer nature of the world, while still
retaining a sense of the actual and the real, will do as an
instrument with which to comprehend the world. In doing so, this
book is not only a model by which to think through Los Angeles, but
as a model by which to think through other world cities.
Geography Speaks is an investigation of how geography is informed
by speech act theory and performativity. Starting with a critical
analysis of how J.L. Austin's speech act theory probed the
permeability between fact and fiction, it then assesses
oppositional interpretations by John Searle and Jacques Derrida,
and in doing so, it explores the fictional aspects within
scientific knowledge. The book then focuses on five key aspects of
the geographical discipline and analyses them using the theories of
speech acts and performance: the performative aspects of the
creation of place; speech act performances and geopolitics; acts of
cartographical construction as variations of speech act
performance; the performative aspects of the creation of public and
private space, and, finally; the history of the discipline as a
sequence of performative acts that attempt to establish geography
as being constitutive of this or that type of disciplinary method
or scientific viewpoint. Geography Speaks is an interdisciplinary
text with a distinct and clear focus on cultural geography while
also synthesizing into geography ideas germane to historiography,
the philosophy of language, the history of science, and comparative
literature.
In the latter part of the C20th, a series of seminal books were
written which examined Los Angeles by the likes of Reyner Banham,
Mike Davis, Edward Soja, Allen Scott, Michael Dear, Frederick
Jameson, Umberto Eco, Bernard-Henri Levy, and Jean Baudrillard
which have been hugely influential in thinking about cities more
broadly. The debates which were generated by these works have
tended to be very heated and either defensive or offensive in
approach. A sufficient amount of time has since passed that a more
measured approach to evaluating this work can now be taken. The
first section of this book, 'Contra This and Contra That', provides
such a critique of the various theories applied to Los Angeles
during the last century, balancing the positive with the negative.
The second part of the book is an investigation of L.A. as it
exists on the ground today. While political, the theoretical stance
taken in this investigation is not mounted as a platform from which
to advocate a particular ideology. Instead, it encompasses cultural
as well as economic issues to put forth a view of L.A. which is
coherent and cogent while at the same time considering its
multi-layed, complex and ever-changing qualities. It concludes by
arguing that sectored off and 'totalizing' visions of the city will
not do as instruments of urban analysis and that only a theory as
mobile as its target will do: one that replicates the polymer
nature of this place. It proposes that, extending that theory to
the world beyond this particular city, only a theory that models
itself on the mobile and polymer nature of the world, while still
retaining a sense of the actual and the real, will do as an
instrument with which to comprehend the world. In doing so, this
book is not only a model by which to think through Los Angeles, but
as a model by which to think through other world cities.
Geography Speaks is an investigation of how geography is informed
by speech act theory and performativity. Starting with a critical
analysis of how J.L. Austin's speech act theory probed the
permeability between fact and fiction, it then assesses
oppositional interpretations by John Searle and Jacques Derrida,
and in doing so, it explores the fictional aspects within
scientific knowledge. The book then focuses on five key aspects of
the geographical discipline and analyses them using the theories of
speech acts and performance: the performative aspects of the
creation of place; speech act performances and geopolitics; acts of
cartographical construction as variations of speech act
performance; the performative aspects of the creation of public and
private space, and, finally; the history of the discipline as a
sequence of performative acts that attempt to establish geography
as being constitutive of this or that type of disciplinary method
or scientific viewpoint. Geography Speaks is an interdisciplinary
text with a distinct and clear focus on cultural geography while
also synthesizing into geography ideas germane to historiography,
the philosophy of language, the history of science, and comparative
literature.
This volume argues that the city cannot be captured by any one mode
of analysis but instead is composed of the mobile, relational,
efficient, sentient, and the phenomenological with all of them cast
in new theoretical configurations and combined into one
methodological entity. Rather than focusing on any one city or
abstract analytical model, this book instead takes a multipronged
theoretical and methodological approach to present the city as an
intelligent affective organism - a sentient being. It proposes that
cities operate on a relational, mobile, and phenomenological basis
through the mode of efficiency, calibrated by a profoundly
complicated division of labor. Its starting point is that the city
is a mobile unit of analysis, from its economic status to its
demographic makeup, from its cultural configuration to its
environmental conditions, and therefore easily evades our
quantitative and qualitative methods of computation and
comprehension. Twenty-First Century Urbanism provides planning and
urban design academics and students with a multifaceted approach to
understanding the development of cities, encouraging the
examination of cities through a myriad, non-linear approach.
Anthropologists, psychologists, feminists, and sociologists have
long studied the "everyday," the quotidian, the taken-for-granted;
however, geographers have lagged behind in engaging with this
slippery aspect of reality. Now, Rob Sullivan makes the case for
geography as a powerful conceptual framework for seeing the
everyday anew and for pushing back against its "givenness": its
capacity to so fade into the background that it controls us in
dangerously unexamined ways. Drawing on a number of theorists
(Foucault, Goffman, Marx, Lefebvre, Hagerstrand, and others),
Sullivan unpacks the concepts and perceived realities that
structure everyday life while grounding them in real-world cases,
such as Nigeria's troubled oil network, the working poor in the
United States, China's urban villages, and ultra-high-end housing
in London and Cairo. In examining the everyday from a geographical
perspective, Sullivan ranges widely across time, space, history,
geography, Marxian reproduction, the body, and the geographical
mind. The everyday, Sullivan suggests, is where change occurs and
where resistance to change can begin. By locating the everyday
through geography, we can help to make change possible. Whatever
the issue, be it struggles over race, LGBT rights, class
inequality, or global warming, the transformations required to
achieve social justice all begin with transformation of the
everyday order.
Data mining provides a set of new techniques to integrate,
synthesize, and analyze tdata, uncovering the hidden patterns that
exist within. Traditionally, techniques such as kernel learning
methods, pattern recognition, and data mining, have been the domain
of researchers in areas such as artificial intelligence, but
leveraging these tools, techniques, and concepts against your data
asset to identify problems early, understand interactions that
exist and highlight previously unrealized relationships through the
combination of these different disciplines can provide significant
value for the investigator and her organization.
Anthropologists, psychologists, feminists, and sociologists have
long studied the "everyday," the quotidian, the taken-for-granted;
however, geographers have lagged behind in engaging with this
slippery aspect of reality. Now, Rob Sullivan makes the case for
geography as a powerful conceptual framework for seeing the
everyday anew and for pushing back against its "givenness": its
capacity to so fade into the background that it controls us in
dangerously unexamined ways. Drawing on a number of theorists
(Foucault, Goffman, Marx, Lefebvre, Hagerstrand, and others),
Sullivan unpacks the concepts and perceived realities that
structure everyday life while grounding them in real-world cases,
such as Nigeria's troubled oil network, the working poor in the
United States, China's urban villages, and ultra-high-end housing
in London and Cairo. In examining the everyday from a geographical
perspective, Sullivan ranges widely across time, space, history,
geography, Marxian reproduction, the body, and the geographical
mind. The everyday, Sullivan suggests, is where change occurs and
where resistance to change can begin. By locating the everyday
through geography, we can help to make change possible. Whatever
the issue, be it struggles over race, LGBT rights, class
inequality, or global warming, the transformations required to
achieve social justice all begin with transformation of the
everyday order.
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