DownloadThe Portobello Bookshop Gift Guide 2024

Cities of Signs

Learning the Logic of Urban Spaces

Andrew T Hickey author Shirley R Steinberg editor The Estate of Joseph Pepi Leistyna editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Peter Lang Publishing Inc

Published:28th Dec '11

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This hardback is available in another edition too:

Cities of Signs cover

This book examines the significance of signs in urban spaces, exploring how they shape our experiences and identities in Cities of Signs.

In Cities of Signs, the author explores the vital role that signs play in shaping urban environments. From street signs that guide our way to advertisements that promise more than they deliver, signs are embedded in the fabric of city life. They serve as markers that not only direct our physical movements but also reflect the cultural narratives that define our experiences in these spaces. The book delves into how these signs create a 'text' of urban life, revealing the underlying logics that govern our interactions with the city and with each other.

The narrative in Cities of Signs goes beyond mere observation; it invites readers to consider the implications of living in a world saturated with signs. The author argues that understanding these signs is essential for grasping the complexities of contemporary urban existence. By analyzing the interplay between signs and the urban landscape, the book sheds light on how we navigate our environments and how our identities are influenced by the signs that surround us.

This insightful work is not only a contribution to urban studies but also to sociology and education. It offers a fresh perspective on how culture is produced and consumed in urban settings. By decoding the cultural production inherent in these environments, Cities of Signs provides readers with a dynamic framework for understanding the significance of signs in our daily lives and the broader implications for society.

«‘Cities of Signs’ firmly establishes Andrew T. Hickey as part of a promising new generation of scholars who push past disciplinary boundaries in their work. With a keen eye for the minutiae of settings and a flair for conceptual analysis, Hickey’s ethnographic case study brings interdisciplinary perspectives to bear upon both the public pedagogy and cultural politics of signs and signage. What can we learn from such generally taken-for-granted signposts of everyday urban life? Instead of setting out to prove a point, ‘Cities of Signs’ immerses the reader in the life-world of the researcher and the seemingly ordinary and even mundane world of a community located within a master-planned edge-city. Hickey constructs lively, inventive and intellectually rigorous narrative that is sure to ignite the sociological imagination.» (Gregory Martin, University of Technology, Sydney)
«Through this timely and engaging book, Andrew T. Hickey answers recent calls for public pedagogical research to explicate how sites work pedagogically. Going beyond surface-level readings of cultural texts to also explore how audiences engage with those texts, ‘Cities of Signs’ troubles simplistic notions of cultural transmission by explicating the various mechanisms through which signs ‘work’ to mediate culture. Hence, ‘Cities of Signs’ presents an account of the ways that public pedagogies actually function.» (Jennifer Sandlin, Co-editor, ‘Handbook of Public Pedagogy’)
«‘Cities of Signs’ firmly establishes Andrew T. Hickey as part of a promising new generation of scholars who push past disciplinary boundaries in their work. With a keen eye for the minutiae of settings and a flair for conceptual analysis, Hickey’s ethnographic case study brings interdisciplinary perspectives to bear upon both the public pedagogy and cultural politics of signs and signage. What can we learn from such generally taken-for-granted signposts of everyday urban life? Instead of setting out to prove a point, ‘Cities of Signs’ immerses the reader in the life-world of the researcher and the seemingly ordinary and even mundane world of a community located within a master-planned edge-city. Hickey constructs lively, inventive and intellectually rigorous narrative that is sure to ignite the sociological imagination.» (Gregory Martin, University of Technology, Sydney)
«Through this timely and engaging book, Andrew T. Hickey answers recent calls for public pedagogical research to explicate how sites work pedagogically. Going beyond surface-level readings of cultural texts to also explore how audiences engage with those texts, ‘Cities of Signs’ troubles simplistic notions of cultural transmission by explicating the various mechanisms through which signs ‘work’ to mediate culture. Hence, ‘Cities of Signs’ presents an account of the ways that public pedagogies actually function.» (Jennifer Sandlin, Co-editor, ‘Handbook of Public Pedagogy’)

ISBN: 9781433111204

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 350g

143 pages

New edition