Description |
vi, 360 pages ; 24 cm |
Series |
Theory culture & society |
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Theory, culture & society (Unnumbered)
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Contents |
The underclass in Europe. The politics of space and the making of the underclass.7.Mobile Subjects: Migration in Comparative Perspective. Case-study: clothing and fashion. Corporatist exclusion in a reunited Germany--Pt.3. Economies of Space and Time.8.Post-Industrial Spaces. Restructuring and the public sector. 9. Time and Memory. Time and the duality of structure. Time, powers and nature. Disorganized capitalism and time--Pt.4.Globalization and Modernity.10.Mobility, Modernity and Place. Travel and modernity. Tourist services and disorganized capitalism. 11. Globalization and Localization. Money and finance. Global culture and national culture --12. Conclusion |
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1.Introduction:After Organized Capitalism--Pt.1. Economies of Objects and Subjects.2.Mobile Objects. Emptying out:subjects, space-time, objects. Core and periphery.3.Reflexive Subjects.Reflexive modernization :the risk society. Giddens:self-reflexivity in modernity. Sources of the self: the uses of allegory. Aesthetic reflexivity and time-space--Pt.2.Economies of Signs and the Other. 4. Reflexive Accumulation: Collective reflexivity: Japanese production systems. Practical reflexivity: German production systems. Discursive reflexivity:information rich production systems.5.Accumulating Signs: The Culture Industries. Flexible production: disintegrated firms. Limits of flexibility:training, finance, distribution. 6.Ungovernable Spaces: The Underclass and Impacted Ghettoes. The American underclass |
Summary |
In exploring this new reflexive world, Lash and Urry argue that today's economies are increasingly economies of signsinformation, symbols, images, desire - and of space, where both signs and social subjects - refugees, financiers, tourists, flaneurs - are mobile over ever greater distances. They show how an understanding of such flows contributes to the analysis of changes in social relations, from the organization of work to the 'culture industries', from the formation of an underclass to new forms of citizenship. Taking its point of departure from the authors' influential The End of Organized Capitalism, this is a book that no one in social and cultural theory, geography and urban studies, political economy, and organization studies can afford to ignore |
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Economies of Signs and Space presents a novel account of social change that supplants conventional understandings of 'society'. In this extraordinary and wide-ranging book, two eminent theorists develop a sociology that takes as its main unit of analysis social and cultural flows through time and across space. Focusing on post-industrial economies, the study examines social inequality and changing experiences of time, space, culture, travel, the environment and globalization. Through a comparative analysis of the UK and USA, Germany and Japan, Lash and Urry show how restructuration after organized capitalism has its basis in increasingly reflexive social actors and organizations. The consequence is not only the much-vaunted 'postmodern condition' but a growth in reflexivity |
Analysis |
Economic conditions Related to Sociology |
Notes |
Cover title: Economies of signs & space |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages [327]-350) and index |
Subject |
Economics -- Sociological aspects.
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Paradigms (Social sciences)
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Postmodernism -- Social aspects.
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Signs and symbols.
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Postmodernism.
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Social change.
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Social history -- 20th century.
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Social interaction.
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Sociology -- Philosophy.
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Space and time.
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Structuralism.
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Author |
Urry, John.
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LC no. |
93086216 |
ISBN |
0803984715 (cased) |
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0803984723 (paperback) |
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