The Digital Street
Autor Jeffrey Laneen Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 ian 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199381272
ISBN-10: 0199381275
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 3 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 206 x 140 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0199381275
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 3 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 206 x 140 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Lane is an early adopter of both virtual and physical modes of data collection, and his adaptability to multiple data contexts is admirable.
The Digital Street is a masterful ethnographic account of inner city life that explores, shows, and tells the stories of urban young people and the growing significance of social media in their lives. Well-written, timely and important, it is a first-rate addition to the growing body of urban ethnography-must read.
Brilliant, penetrating and revelatory. The Digital Street has permanently changed the way I think about digitial culture, social media and how it structures the social hierarchies of life off-line, Its insights are so widely applicable beyond the book's specific subject matter, it's a must-read for anyone trying to think rigorously about technology and society at this perilous moment.
Having gained extraordinary access to the social and emotional lives of Harlem's young black teenagers, Jeffrey Lane traces their tactics of survival as the physical street becomes intertwined with 'the digital street.' The result, as he unveils to us, is an intensification of visibility that demands new kinds of performances, to reconfigured audiences, necessary if risks are to be managed and opportunities to thrive are to be found.
This thoughtful, intensive ethnography of a Harlem neighborhood moves well beyond traditional perspectives on urban violence, considering the ways that new technologies and social media have transformed how youth interact and compete, as well as help each other escape from cycles of violence. With this nuanced portrayal of youth culture on- and off-line, The Digital Street promises to take urban ethnography into the twenty-first century.
The Digital Street is a masterful ethnographic account of inner city life that explores, shows, and tells the stories of urban young people and the growing significance of social media in their lives. Well-written, timely and important, it is a first-rate addition to the growing body of urban ethnography-must read.
Brilliant, penetrating and revelatory. The Digital Street has permanently changed the way I think about digitial culture, social media and how it structures the social hierarchies of life off-line, Its insights are so widely applicable beyond the book's specific subject matter, it's a must-read for anyone trying to think rigorously about technology and society at this perilous moment.
Having gained extraordinary access to the social and emotional lives of Harlem's young black teenagers, Jeffrey Lane traces their tactics of survival as the physical street becomes intertwined with 'the digital street.' The result, as he unveils to us, is an intensification of visibility that demands new kinds of performances, to reconfigured audiences, necessary if risks are to be managed and opportunities to thrive are to be found.
This thoughtful, intensive ethnography of a Harlem neighborhood moves well beyond traditional perspectives on urban violence, considering the ways that new technologies and social media have transformed how youth interact and compete, as well as help each other escape from cycles of violence. With this nuanced portrayal of youth culture on- and off-line, The Digital Street promises to take urban ethnography into the twenty-first century.
Notă biografică
Jeffrey Lane is a sociologist at Rutgers University New Brunswick in the School of Communication and Information. He studies urban community by observing the same people in person and online. Lane examines issues of youth, inequality, communication, and technology and his research has been written about by The Atlantic and Vice. His first book, Under the Boards, explored the meaning of race in the basketball industry.