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La camera dello zodiaco. Palazzo ducale di Mantova (Italian Edition)

[ePub] La camera dello zodiaco. Palazzo ducale di Mantova (Italian Edition) by Tiziana Bacco in Arts-Photography

Description

The Routledge Companion to the Cultural Industries is collection of contemporary scholarship on the cultural industries and seeks to re-assert the importance of cultural production and consumption against the purely economic imperatives of the lsquo;creative industriesrsquo;. Across 43 chapters drawn from a wide range of geographic and disciplinary perspectives; this comprehensive volume offers a critical and empirically-informed examination of the contemporary cultural industries. A range of cultural industries are explored; from videogames to art galleries; all the time focussing on the culture that is being produced and its wider symbolic and socio-cultural meaning. Individual chapters consider their industrial structure; the policy that governs them; their geography; the labour that produces them; and the meaning they offer to consumers and participants. The collection also explores the historical dimension of cultural industry debates providing context for new readers; as well as critical orientation for those more familiar with the subject. Questions of industry structure; labour; place; international development; consumption and regulation are all explored in terms of their historical trajectory and potential future direction. By assessing the current challenges facing the cultural industries this collection of contemporary scholarship provides students and researchers with an essential guide to key ideas; issues; concepts and debates in the field.


#3374257 in eBooks 2015-05-22 2015-05-22File Name: B00Y417SWO


Review
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. An objective overview of KarachiBy Mansura Minhas`Instant City captures the essence of Karachi. It takes the readers into the history and transformation of Karachi as it details the events of a horrendous day in the aftermath of a terrorist attack on a religious procession. Karachi is no ordinary city and its impossible to encapsulate its complexities in a mere 200 pages. However; Inskeep does justice to the subject matter. Instant City is a wonderful book and a must read for those who wish to broaden their understanding of the developing world. Karachi is the backbone and melting pot of Pakistan - a country riddled with uncertainties and one at the nexus of modern day geopolitics.Another aspect that renders credibility to this book is the authenticity and nonpartisan approach of Steve Inskeep. Inskeeps fascination and intrigue with Karachi is apparent and his outstanding ability to present facts objectively is ever present in his interviews with personalities from varied backgrounds. This is crucial to understanding Karachis diversity and how its multilayered outlook shapes its destiny. In addition to delving into the historical; cultural and political transformation of Karachi; Instant City explores its mammoth growth. It is interesting to read how the city owes its sustenance to improvised mechanisms that somehow defy the conventional wisdom of urban planning.As a Karachite; I am extremely fascinated and excited about this book and feel sincerely indebted to Inskeep for this wonderful effort. He is a wonderful reporter and has convincingly demonstrated his writing skills in Instant City. It is a fabulous read and highly recommended.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Unique stories about the real people of KarachiBy Biochem StudentInstant city is about the real Karachi; its people and their local stories. The book begins with the bombing of the Ashura procession of 2009 and the author begins to explain through a historical story of how the city reached such levels of violence. It starts with Karachi as a religiously diverse city before partition. The founding of Pakistan; the expectations and dreams of the ldquo;Muhajirsrdquo; and the concerns of non-Muslim ldquo;nativesrdquo; are made clear within the first few pages. The development of housing projects by a greek architect and a diagram of these houses reminds one of homes which still stand in Karachi and parts of Sindh. After the Generals you get Bhutto and the secession of Bangladesh. The book does not go into detail about the wars with India or Pakistani political figures. Rather it focuses on people in the city. One segment highlights a local neighborhood organization which began digging its own sewers and putting up its own electrical poles because the government wouldnrsquo;t do so. We also meet Tony Tufail an entrepreneur who constructed the biggest Casino in South Asia to attract gulf Kings but was eventually shut down by Zia. The book also gives the story of Sattar Ehdi throughout; from his humble beginnings of selling pan on the streets to owning a small pharmacy and eventually providing lifesaving services to the city. The stories are very personal as the author developed good relationships with people he interviews. Another account is of Dr.Seemin Jumali the women in charge of the Jinnah Hospital ER which was bombed after receiving victims of the Arbaeen bombing. Dr. Jumali recounts how after the bombing she went home and wrote her will and explained to her children what to do if one day she doesnrsquo;t return from work. Dr. Jumali also states her desire to stay in Karachi and sees it as a personal goal to serve the city. MQM is not left untouched by the author; not only does he develop a relationship with Mustapha Kamal but also victims targeted by MQM. One story being of Nasir Baloch a neighborhood activist and volunteer tutor. Baloch was fighting to prevent the construction of houses in his neighborhood park and in the process explicitly blamed MQM for being behind the land grab. This eventually leads to his death. Amber Alibhai is another individual introduced as as the private ldquo;parks and recreationsrdquo; committee who was working with Baloch and works throughout the city to preserve parks. Overall this is a superb book on Karachi and its inhabitants. The author talks to a variety of real people; some being poor activist; some being doctors; some high ranking MQM officals; some working to better the city and some even calling for a constitutional edict labeling Shias Kafirs.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A Trend in Cities with Multimillion PopulationsBy neil sclaterSteve Inskeep uses Karachi; Pakistan; as a stand-in for the rise of super "Instant cities with populations exceeding 10 million since the end of WW II; particularly in Asia. He points out that many have grown without master planning and sensible government regulation in matters such as sanitation and public safety. In the Karachi example; population expansion increased government corruption and indifference as well as conflict between Hindus and Sunni and Shiite Muslims. Poor newcomers escaping dangerous regions were forced to illegally squat on government land. Moreover;They had to provide their own materials and build their own inferior and closely packed houses as well as dig their own sewers.The result was even more conflict and chaos..But the good news was private citizens emerged to provide needed medical; ambulance; and other critical civil services to compensate for Karachi government stalling. I rated this book four stars because the topic may not be of wide general interest. However; it should be of value to readers who want to understand this ongoing trend toward ever larger "Instant Cities" in places like China and India..

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