Rebranding Precarity :Pop-up Culture as the Seductive New Normal

Rebranding Precarity

Rebranding Precarity :Pop-up Culture as the Seductive New Normal

(Author)
paperback
Published: 29 October, 2020
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Description

'Pop-up' is a fully-fledged, new urbanism. Celebrated as a flexible and exciting new form of place making, pop-up culture includes temporary or nomadic sites such as cinemas, container malls, supper clubs, even pop-up housing and is now ubiquitous in cities across the world. But what are the stakes of the ‘pop-up’ city?

Traversing a wealth of fascinating case studies, Rebranding Precarity shows how pop-up works to rebrand insecurity and encourages us to embrace precarity as the new normal. Revealing how urban crisis has particular temporal and spatial characteristics, defined by uncertainty, instability, fractures and gaps, it illuminates how those markers of crisis have been optimistically reimagined over the last few years, through an examination of seven logics that rebrand insecurity including within housing, labour economies and gentrifying areas. In doing so, it paints a frightening picture of how crisis conditions have become not just accepted, but are in fact desired, in today’s metropolis.

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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9781786999825
ISBN10 178699982X
Number Of Pages 320
Item Weight 400 g
Product Dimensions 134 x 216 x 18 mm
Publisher / Reseller Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Format paperback
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Media Reviews

An important contribution to the discussion on how precarity is shifting from exception to norm, and how cities are transforming in a period after the financial crisis. * Ben Anderson, Durham University *
This is an important book offering a much needed critical engagement with the deployment of pop-up and other temporary strategies as a glamourous mask distracting us from the realities of the new normal of precarious lives and communities. * Susan Luckman, University of South Australia *

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Author's Bio

Ella Harris is currently a Leverhulme Fellow in the Geography department at Birkbeck, University of London. She has academic expertise in urban cultures of the recession/austerity era, as well as in interactive documentary as a research method. She has published widely on pop-up culture, housing precarity, interactive documentary and compensatory cultures.

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