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Creative Measures of the Anthropocene: Art, Mobilities, and Participatory Geographies 2019 ed. [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 215 pages, height x width: 210x148 mm, weight: 454 g, 47 Illustrations, color; 3 Illustrations, black and white; XIII, 215 p. 50 illus., 47 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Nov-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Verlag, Singapore
  • ISBN-10: 9811396477
  • ISBN-13: 9789811396472
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 215 pages, height x width: 210x148 mm, weight: 454 g, 47 Illustrations, color; 3 Illustrations, black and white; XIII, 215 p. 50 illus., 47 illus. in color., 1 Hardback
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Nov-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Verlag, Singapore
  • ISBN-10: 9811396477
  • ISBN-13: 9789811396472
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This book proposes that creative and participatory modes of measuring, knowing, and moving in the world are needed for coming to grips with the Anthropocene epoch. It interrogates how creative, affective and experiential encounters that traverse the local and the global, as well as the mundane and the everyday, can offer new perspectives on the challenges that lay ahead. This book considers the role of the arts in exploring geographical concerns and increasing human mobility. In doing so, it offers ways to counteract the unstable, shifting and disorienting impacts and debates surrounding human activity and the Anthropocene. The authors bring together perspectives from mobilities, creative arts, cultural geography, philosophy and humanities in an innovative exploration of how creative forms of measurement can assist in reconfiguring individual and collective action.
1 Measure and Method
1(24)
New Measures Are Required
3(4)
Class, Get Your Rulers Out: Introducing the Anthropocene
7(4)
Art
11(2)
Mobilities
13(3)
Participatory Geographies
16(2)
A Creative Sense of Measure
18(2)
References
20(5)
2 Creative Modalities
25(28)
Alternative Modes of Measure
27(5)
Multi-modal Mobilities
32(14)
Scale
33(4)
Sensation
37(4)
Spatiality
41(5)
Shifting Attentions
46(3)
References
49(4)
3 Multi-scalar Shifts and Drifts
53(30)
Mobilities of the Anthropocene
55(3)
Sensing the Multi-scalar
58(7)
Creative Surveys
65(7)
Artwork: Drifting Coordinates
72(5)
Attuning to Multiplicities
77(2)
References
79(4)
4 Affective Measures
83(26)
The Value of Art
86(3)
The "Excluded Middle"
89(4)
Potentials and Diagrams
93(2)
Standardised Measures Tending to Abstraction
95(3)
Effective Measure (Affect + Effect)
98(5)
Conclusion
103(2)
References
105(4)
5 From the Corporeal to the Imaginative
109(30)
Touristic Ideals and Modes of Imagining Place
111(6)
Reconfiguring Ideas of Place Through (Corporeal) Creative Practice
117(3)
Artwork: Remote Viewing Platforms
120(9)
Kinaesthetic Connections
129(3)
Knowing Place Through Corporeal and Imaginative Measures
132(4)
References
136(3)
6 On Being Level-Headed
139(28)
Level-Headedness
141(7)
Affor(d)ances
148(3)
Artworks: Conversing with Buildings
151(10)
Conclusion
161(3)
References
164(3)
7 From the Imaginative to the Anthropocene
167(32)
Imaginaries in the Everyday
169(5)
Slicing Through Sensations, Scales, and Spatialities
174(1)
Sensation: Floating Floor Levels
175(6)
Scale: Migrant Stones
181(7)
Spatiality: Movable Concrete Paths
188(6)
Mobility Feedback in the Anthropocene
194(3)
References
197(2)
8 A Marker of Current Measures
199(12)
Watching a Pot Boil, Paint Dry, or Ice Melt
200(3)
Increasing Attunement to Individual-Collective Practices
203(4)
Creative Measuring
207(1)
References
208(3)
Index 211
Kaya Barry is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research, Griffith University, Australia. She is a geographer and artist who investigates the intersections of everyday mobility, creativity and tourism. Jondi Keane is an arts practitioner, critical thinker and Associate Professor at Deakin University, Australia. For more than three decades he has exhibited, performed and published in the USA, UK, Europe and Australia.