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Textes
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Crévilles
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Type de contenu : livres
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Title
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L'esthétisation du monde : Vivre à l'âge du capitalisme artiste
Subject
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Lipovetski Gilles, Serroy Jean, capitalisme artiste, hyperconsommation, production esthétique, esthétisation, design, mode, marketing urbain, mondialisation
Date
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28 mars 2013
Publisher
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Gallimard
Format
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496
Description
An account of the resource
<div><b>Présentation par l'éditeur :</b></div> </div> On connaît la rengaine, tant elle semble réaliste : richesse du monde, appauvrissement des existences ; triomphe du capital, liquidation des savoir-vivre ; surpuissance de la finance, "prolétarisation" et unification des modes de vie, par l’industrialisation de la camelote kitsch et des produits jetables, interchangeables, insignifiants - le capitalisme est une machine de déchéance esthétique et d’enlaidissement du monde.</div> </div> Est-ce si sûr ?</div> </div> Le style, la beauté, la mobilisation des goûts et des sensibilités s’imposent chaque jour davantage comme des impératifs stratégiques des marques : le capitalisme d’hyperconsommation est un mode de production esthétique.</div> </div> Dans les industries de consommation, le design, la mode, la publicité, la décoration, le cinéma, le show-business des produits chargés de séduction sont créés en masse. Ils véhiculent des affects et de la sensibilité, ils agencent un univers esthétique proliférant et hétérogène par l’éclectisme des styles qui s’y déploie. Partout le réel se construit comme une image en y intégrant une dimension esthétique-émotionnelle devenue centrale dans la compétition que se livrent les marques.</div> </div> Tel est le capitalisme artiste, lequel se caractérise par le poids grandissant des marchés de la sensibilité, par un travail systématique de stylisation des biens et des lieux marchands, par l'intégration généralisée de l'art, du "look" et de l'affect dans l'univers consumériste. Créant un paysage économique mondial chaotique tout en stylisant l’univers du quotidien, le capitalisme est moins un ogre dévorant ses propres enfants qu’un Janus à deux visages.</div> </div>
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Ouvrage
capitalisme artiste
design
esthétisation
hyperconsommation
Lipovetski Gilles
marketing urbain
mode
mondialisation
production esthétique
Serroy Jean
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8
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Dublin Core
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Title
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Textes
Contributor
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Crévilles
Livre
Type de contenu : livres
Dublin Core
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Title
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Cities and design
Subject
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design, forme urbaine, environnement urbain, fashion, mode, culture urbaine, géographie urbaine, aménagement urbain, Knox Paul L.
Creator
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Paul L. Knox
Date
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July 2010
Publisher
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Routledge
Format
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282
Description
An account of the resource
<div><b>Abstract from the publisher : </b></div>
</div>
Cities, initially a product of the manufacturing era, have been thoroughly remade in the image of consumer society. Competitive spending among affluent households has intensified the importance of style and design at every scale and design professions have grown in size and importance, reflecting distinctive geographies and locating disproportionately in cities most intimately connected with global systems of key business services. Meanwhile, many observers still believe good design can make positive contributions to people’s lives.<br />
<br />
Cities and Design explores the complex relationships between design and urban environments. It traces the intellectual roots of urban design, presents a critical appraisal of the imprint and effectiveness of design professions in shaping urban environments, examines the role of design in the material culture of contemporary cities, and explores the complex linkages among designers, producers and distributors in contemporary cities: for example fashion and graphic design in New York; architecture, fashion and publishing in London; furniture, industrial design, interior design and fashion in Milan; haute couture in Paris; and so on.<br />
<br />
This book offers a distinctive social science perspective on the economic and cultural context of design in contemporary cities, presenting cities themselves as settings for design, design services and the ‘affect’ associated with design.</div>
</div>
<b>Paul Knox </b>is University Distinguished Professor and Senior Fellow for International Advancement at Virginia Tech, where he was Dean of the College of Architecture and Urban Studies from 1997 to 2006. </div>
</div>
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Ouvrage
aménagement urbain
culture urbaine
design
environnement urbain
fashion
forme urbaine
géographie urbaine
Knox Paul L.
mode
-
Dublin Core
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Textes
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Crévilles
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Title
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New York City. Virtual issue of the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
Subject
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New York, mutation urbaine, justice sociale, gentrification, mouvement social, squat, sécurité, logement, économie, travail, art, mode, fashion, Gandy Matthew
Creator
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NC
Date
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February 2012
Publisher
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Wiley
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http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291468-2427/homepage/urban_sociology_articles.htm#NEW_YORK_CITY
Format
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Description
An account of the resource
<div><b>Abstract from the publisher:</b></div>
</div>
Many of the key debates in urban research over the last thirty years have occurred in and through New York City. A range of key figures in the analysis of capitalist urbanization have published their research on New York City in the pages of this journal including Robert Beauregard, Susan Fainstein, John Friedmann, Loretta Lees, Ann Markusen, Margit Mayer, Peter Marcuse, Harvey Molotch, Neil Smith, Sharon Zukin and many others.<br />
<br />
We can differentiate between two main bodies of work in relation to New York City: firstly, the role of the city as an intellectual arena through which key theoretical ideas have been explored and elaborated; and secondly, those works that focus on the city itself for the analysis of specific manifestations of urban transformation. If we consider the ‘thinking space’ of the city it is clear that the role of New York as an inspiration for thought and also a focus for analysis are often interrelated so we cannot easily disentangle the theoretical and empirical dimensions to urban scholarship. Although, we cannot refer to a ‘New York School’ in quite the same way as the LA School of the 1990s — exemplified by the work of Ed Soja, Allen J. Scott and others — or even the Venice School of the 1970s — with the distinctive neo-Marxian architectonic discourse of Massimo Cacciari and Manfredo Tafuri — there is nonetheless a powerful skein of individual and institutional connections that places the city at the centre of a series of critical debates. There has been, through the work of Peter Marcuse, Neil Smith and others, a deep dedication to exploring aspects of social injustice in New York City as a means to build a powerful body of empirically grounded theoretical work. A set of conceptual tools and vantage points have emerged from the city which remain pivotal to socially engaged urban research.<br />
<br />
Critical areas of scholarship on New York City addressed in IJURR include migration, labour markets and the incidence of urban poverty; the effects of fiscal crisis on patterns of urban government and public service provision; housing and ghetto formation; gentrification and class displacement; the garment industry and processes of industrial change; the rise of art districts and the power of cultural capital; and more recently, the city as a focal point for critical security discourses and geopolitical agendas.<br />
<br />
In selecting ten articles for this IJURR virtual issue (from more than 40 possibilities) I have sought a balance between past and present, placing some ‘classic’ articles alongside a few less known contributions. There comes a certain point where the journal itself becomes part of the discourse in question: essays may link in unexpected ways or novel insights may subsequently become central elements in urban debate. I hope that this initial selection will provoke further reading and reflection and perhaps even the writing of new articles that carry these debates forward.</div>
</div>
<b>Contents:</b></div>
</div>
Neil Smith and James Defillippis - The reassertion of economics: 1990s gentrification in the Lower East Side</div>
Hans Prujit - Is the institutionalization of urban movements inevitable? A comparison of the opportunities for sustained squatting in New York City and Amsterdam</div>
Harvey Molotch and Noah Mcclain - Dealing with urban terror: Heritages of control, varieties of intervention, strategies of research</div>
Norma M. Rantisi - The ascendance of New York fashion</div>
Sharon Zukin - Loft living as 'historic compromise' in the urban core: The New York experience</div>
Steven Katz and Margit Mayer - Gimme shelter: Self-help housing struggles within and against the state in New York City and West Berlin</div>
Peter Marcuse - 'Dual city': A muddy metaphor for a quartered city</div>
Susan S. Fainstein - Economics, politics and development policy: The convergence of New York and London</div>
Patricia R. Pessar - Sweatshop workers and domestic ideologies: Dominican women in New York's apparel industry</div>
Harvey Molotch and Mark Treskon - Changing art: SoHo, Chelsea and the dynamic geography of galleries in New York City</div>
</div>
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Revue
art
économie
fashion
Gandy Matthew
gentrification
justice sociale
logement
mode
mouvement social
mutation urbaine
New York
sécurité
squat
travail