product
7162733Mobile Cityhttps://www.gandhi.com.mx/mobile-city-9781501778711/phttps://gandhi.vtexassets.com/arquivos/ids/6706968/image.jpg?v=638695450953470000423445MXNCornell University PressInStock/Ebooks/<p><strong>In</strong> <em><strong>Mobile City</strong></em>, Jordan H. Kraemer charts the rise of social media and an emerging "knowledge" class in early-2000s Berlin. Many young Germans and EU-Auslnder (foreigners from other EU countries), attracted to Berlins vibrant post-unification counterculture, moved to the city just as they began using social media like Facebook and Twitter. Social media and Berlin alike became hip sites for urban, middle-class aspirations, but, as Kraemer accounts, social media users became embroiled in contestations over class mobility and identity, as urban planners and developers remade Berlin into a neoliberal "creative city."</p><p>The rise of this creative city involved scale-making projects that fused imaginaries of digital technologies with the expansive impulses of late capital: a vision of world peace and economic cooperation through global interconnection. But in Berlin, scalar transformations were lived out through ordinary practices that reconfigured daily sociality, mobility, and urban space. <em>Mobile City</em> explores how digital media practices forged emergent scales like the global and supranational yet were equally complicit in potential European disintegration and illiberalism.</p>...6822754Mobile City423445https://www.gandhi.com.mx/mobile-city-9781501778711/phttps://gandhi.vtexassets.com/arquivos/ids/6706968/image.jpg?v=638695450953470000InStockMXN99999DIEbook20259781501778711_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_<p><strong>In</strong> <em><strong>Mobile City</strong></em>, Jordan H. Kraemer charts the rise of social media and an emerging "knowledge" class in early-2000s Berlin. Many young Germans and EU-Auslnder (foreigners from other EU countries), attracted to Berlins vibrant post-unification counterculture, moved to the city just as they began using social media like Facebook and Twitter. Social media and Berlin alike became hip sites for urban, middle-class aspirations, but, as Kraemer accounts, social media users became embroiled in contestations over class mobility and identity, as urban planners and developers remade Berlin into a neoliberal "creative city."</p><p>The rise of this creative city involved scale-making projects that fused imaginaries of digital technologies with the expansive impulses of late capital: a vision of world peace and economic cooperation through global interconnection. But in Berlin, scalar transformations were lived out through ordinary practices that reconfigured daily sociality, mobility, and urban space. <em>Mobile City</em> explores how digital media practices forged emergent scales like the global and supranational yet were equally complicit in potential European disintegration and illiberalism.</p>...9781501778711_Cornell University Presslibro_electonico_9781501778711_9781501778711Jordan H.InglésMéxico2025-01-15T00:00:00+00:00https://getbook.kobo.com/koboid-prod-public/ingram30-epub-45ee496f-3f32-48ae-aeb5-d76751faf005.epub2025-01-15T00:00:00+00:00Cornell University Press