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Digital services, platforms and arrangements are often promoted as
smooth and convenient, smart or intelligent. When introduced,
devices can appear utterly fascinating or awkward, even
disquieting. Eventually, however, they soon disappear in the muddle
of everyday life. This is how Mundania takes form. Based on
original research, this book uses the concept of mundania to better
understand technological change. Scholar-artist Robert Willim
deftly unpacks the interplay between everyday life and the immense
complexity of technological infrastructures. Offering imaginative
new insights into our relationship with technology, this book will
appeal to readers in a range of fields from science and technology
and media studies to the arts.
Digital services, platforms and arrangements are often promoted as
smooth and convenient, smart or intelligent. When introduced,
devices can appear utterly fascinating or awkward, even
disquieting. Eventually, however, they soon disappear in the muddle
of everyday life. This is how Mundania takes form. Based on
original research, this book uses the concept of mundania to better
understand technological change. Scholar-artist Robert Willim
deftly unpacks the interplay between everyday life and the immense
complexity of technological infrastructures. Offering imaginative
new insights into our relationship with technology, this book will
appeal to readers in a range of fields from science and technology
and media studies to the arts.
What happens when economies 'heat up'? This book looks at the
1990s, years of intense economic experimentation, when buzz words
such as 'network society', 'the experience economy', 'creative
cities' and 'glocalization' were everywhere. A fascinating
perspective on 'The New Economy' emerges as the authors explore the
worlds of coolhunters, biotech brokers, career coaches, software
entrepreneurs and event managers and tackle such questions as: -
how is magic used in the quest for newness and change? - what
happens when cultural techniques such as branding and styling
colonize new arenas? - what turns out to be just a flash-in-the-pan
and what has a lasting impact? This book is essential reading for
anyone wishing to understand how economies operate in periods of
rapid transformation.
What happens when economies 'heat up'? This book looks at the
1990s, years of intense economic experimentation, when buzz words
such as 'network society', 'the experience economy', 'creative
cities' and 'glocalization' were everywhere. A fascinating
perspective on 'The New Economy' emerges as the authors explore the
worlds of coolhunters, biotech brokers, career coaches, software
entrepreneurs and event managers and tackle such questions as: -
how is magic used in the quest for newness and change? - what
happens when cultural techniques such as branding and styling
colonize new arenas? - what turns out to be just a flash-in-the-pan
and what has a lasting impact? This book is essential reading for
anyone wishing to understand how economies operate in periods of
rapid transformation.
Ethnography has become something of a buzzword in recent years. It
is talked about and invoked in disciplines ranging from
anthropology and ethnology to literature, history, business
administration and design studies. Textbooks that teach ethnography
tend to imbue students with the impression that ethnography is a
mode of systematic investigation by which the researcher gets
closer to the realities of people's everyday lives. But how
straightforward are these processes in reality? As ethnography
spreads into new folds of research both within and without the
academy, the contributions in this volume demonstrate the manner in
which field methods are adjusting, transforming or taking new forms
altogether. If textbooks might lead students to believe that
observations and interviews are the grounds upon which "good"
ethnography can regularly be produced, the authors in this volume
take as their point of departure the realisation that ethnography
is being used in a multitude of different contexts which forces
them -- and us as readers -- to question the "regularities" and
"irregularities" of their own work.
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