ABSTRACT

Cities have long been recognized as key sites for fostering new communication practices. However, as contemporary cities experience major changes, how do diverse inhabitants encounter each other? How do cities remember?  What is the role of the built environment in fostering sites for public communication in a digital era? Communicative Cities and Urban Space offers a critical analysis of contemporary changes in the relation between urban space and communication.

This volume seeks to understand the situatedness of contemporary communication practices in diverse contexts of urban life, and to explore digitized urban space as a historically specific communicative environment. The essays in this book collectively propose that the concept of the ‘communicative city’ is a productive frame for rethinking the above questions in the context of 21st-century ‘media cities’. They challenge us to reconsider qualities such as openness, autonomy and diversity in contemporary urban communication practices, and to identify factors that might expand or constrict communicative possibilities.

Students and scholars of communication studies and urban studies would benefit from this book.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

Spaces of communication

part 1|51 pages

Rethinking mediated urban space as communicative space

chapter 4|15 pages

Multispace

Flows, thresholds and difference in the study of mediated cities

part 2|67 pages

Places, communication and placemaking

chapter 5|13 pages

Embodied publicness

Urban life in the age of mobile networks

chapter 7|15 pages

Decorating and imagining the new city with public art

A study on the sculptures and installations in Suzhou Industrial Park

chapter 8|20 pages

SmArt city – turbulent city

Artistic engagements with urban ecologies in Delhi

part 3|48 pages

Urban screens and new forms of public participation

chapter 9|16 pages

Urban renewal through media infrastructure

A case study of large screen development in Dandenong, Melbourne

chapter 10|16 pages

Capturing ambient participation

Indian Independence Day at Federation Square

part 4|60 pages

Urban infrastructure and the communicative city

chapter 12|12 pages

Trams as urban media

Public transportation and the construction of Shanghai’s “circulation civilization” in the early twentieth century

chapter 13|19 pages

Spectacular cities and mobile subjects

International students and Melbourne

chapter 14|12 pages

Drone media in the perspective of urban communication

A digitalized seeing method

chapter 15|15 pages

Spatial practices and asymmetric alignment of temporalities

How “Shanghai Fabu” WeChat account transforms government communication in Shanghai