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Overview"The Urban Spectator is a lively and utterly fascinating exploration of the ways in which technologies have influenced our collective conception of the American city, as well as our relationship with urban space and architecture. Eric Gordon argues that the city, developing late and in conjunction with a range of modern media, produced a particular way of seeing-what he labels ""possessive spectatorship."" Lacking the historical rootedness of European cities, the American city was open to individual interpretation, definition, and ownership. Beginning with the White City of the Chicago World's Fair of 1893 and the efforts to commodify the concept city through photography, Gordon shows how the American city has always been a product of the collision between the dominant conceptualization, shaped by contemporary media, and the spectator. From the viewfinder of the Kodak camera, to the public display of early cinema, to the speculative desire of network radio, all the way to machine-age utopianism, nostalgia, and America's""rerun"" culture, the city is an amalgam of practice and concept. All of this comes to a head in the ""database city"" where urban spectatorship takes on the characteristics of a Google search. In new urban developments, the spectator searches, retrieves, and combines urban references to construct each experience of the city." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Eric GordonPublisher: Dartmouth College Press Imprint: Dartmouth College Press Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.816kg ISBN: 9781584658030ISBN 10: 1584658037 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 11 March 2010 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: No Longer Our Product Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsIn his new book, Eric Gordon adds an important new perspective to our understanding of the relationship between visual illustrations and urban landscapes. In The Urban Spectator: American Concept-Cities from Kodak to Google, Gordon argues American cities have produced a new way of seeing, and catalogs the subtle ways visual illustrations mold our perceptions of the urban landscape, our expectations of the city, and ultimately the urban form itself. Gordon's book successfully provides a historical and conceptual framework . . . to visualize the city and engage its residents to shaping its future. --Planning and Technology Today Planning and Technology Today Choice Winterthur Portfolio In his new book, Eric Gordon adds an important new perspective to our understanding of the relationship between visual illustrations and urban landscapes. In The Urban Spectator: American Concept-Cities from Kodak to Google, Gordon argues American cities have produced a new way of seeing, and catalogs the subtle ways visual illustrations mold our perceptions of the urban landscape, our expectations of the city, and ultimately the urban form itself. Gordon's book successfully provides a historical and conceptual framework . . . to visualize the city and engage its residents to shaping its future.-- Planning and Technology Today Gordon contributes to an understanding of how over the last century people have distanced themselves from the actual city and their fellow citizens. As his book points out, one sees this in ever-changing ways through the mediation of screens . . .The author handles this form of seeing, called possessive spectatorship, with authority. Recommended. -- Choice The premise of Gordon's The Urban Spectator is that people have 'a cultural impulse to possess, control, and assemble the experience of the city.' The handheld camera of the late nineteenth century provided a powerful technology for satisfying this urge. Subsequent visual technologies (e.g., film and television) reinforced and extended a possessive spectatorship. Gordon further claims that once we began to represent the city cinematically or as a series of snapshots, the city itself is transformed. Technology mediates the city and, then, the city is brought into correspondence with its representations. [Gordon makes] it clear that electronic technology does not simply mediate, it also senses our presence; creates reactive, nonhuman worlds; and changes how cities are perceived, represented, and reimagined. -- Winterthur Portfolio The premise of Gordon s The Urban Spectator is that people have a cultural impulse to possess, control, and assemble the experience of the city. The handheld camera of the late nineteenth century provided a powerful technology for satisfying this urge. Subsequent visual technologies (e.g., film and television) reinforced and extended a possessive spectatorship. Gordon further claims that once we began to represent the city cinematically or as a series of snapshots, the city itself is transformed. Technology mediates the city and, then, the city is brought into correspondence with its representations. [Gordon makes] it clear that electronic technology does not simply mediate, it also senses our presence; creates reactive, nonhuman worlds; and changes how cities are perceived, represented, and reimagined. Winterthur Portfolio Gordon contributes to an understanding of how over the last century people have distanced themselves from the actual city and their fellow citizens. As his book points out, one sees this in ever-changing ways through the mediation of screens . . .The author handles this form of seeing, called possessive spectatorship, with authority. Recommended. Choice In his new book, Eric Gordon adds an important new perspective to our understanding of the relationship between visual illustrations and urban landscapes. In The Urban Spectator: American Concept-Cities from Kodak to Google, Gordon argues American cities have produced a new way of seeing, and catalogs the subtle ways visual illustrations mold our perceptions of the urban landscape, our expectations of the city, and ultimately the urban form itself. Gordon s book successfully provides a historical and conceptual framework . . . to visualize the city and engage its residents to shaping its future. Planning and Technology Today The premise of Gordon's The Urban Spectator is that people have 'a cultural impulse to possess, control, and assemble the experience of the city.' The handheld camera of the late nineteenth century provided a powerful technology for satisfying this urge. Subsequent visual technologies (e.g., film and television) reinforced and extended a possessive spectatorship. Gordon further claims that once we began to represent the city cinematically or as a series of snapshots, the city itself is transformed. Technology mediates the city and, then, the city is brought into correspondence with its representations. [Gordon makes] it clear that electronic technology does not simply mediate, it also senses our presence; creates reactive, nonhuman worlds; and changes how cities are perceived, represented, and reimagined. Winterthur Portfolio The premise of Gordon's The Urban Spectator is that people have 'a cultural impulse to possess, control, and assemble the experience of the city.' The handheld camera of the late nineteenth century provided a powerful technology for satisfying this urge. Subsequent visual technologies (e.g., film and television) reinforced and extended a possessive spectatorship. Gordon further claims that once we began to represent the city cinematically or as a series of snapshots, the city itself is transformed. Technology mediates the city and, then, the city is brought into correspondence with its representations. [Gordon makes] it clear that electronic technology does not simply mediate, it also senses our presence; creates reactive, nonhuman worlds; and changes how cities are perceived, represented, and reimagined. --Winterthur Portfolio Winterthur Portfolio Gordon contributes to an understanding of how over the last century people have distanced themselves from the actual city and their fellow citizens. As his book points out, one sees this in ever-changing ways through the mediation of screens . . .The author handles this form of seeing, called possessive spectatorship, with authority. Recommended. --Choice Author InformationERIC GORDON is assistant professor of visual and media arts at Emerson College. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |