ABSTRACT

Bringing together leading scholars from around the world and across scholarly disciplines, this collection of 32 original chapters provides a comprehensive exploration of the relationships between cities and media.

The volume showcases diverse methods for studying media and the city and posits "media urbanism" as an approach to the co-construction and interactions among media texts and technologies, media users, media industries, media histories, and urban space. Chapters serve as a guide to humanities-based ways of studying urban imaginaries, infrastructures and architectures, development and redevelopment, and strategies and tactics as well as a provocation toward new lines of inquiry that further explore the dense interconnectedness of media and cities. Structured thematically, the chapters are organized into four distinct sections, introduced with editorial commentary that places the chapters into conversation with each other and frames them in relation to an overarching question, problem, or method. Part I: Imaginaries and cityscapes focuses on screen representations and mediated experiences of urban space produced and consumed by various actors; Part II: Architectures and infrastructures highlights the different ways in which built environments and socio-technical substrates that sustain differential mobilities, urban rhythms, and systems of circulation and exchange are intertwined with various forms of media and mediation; Part III: Development and redevelopment examines efforts by urban planners and designers, municipal governments, and community organizers to utilize media forms to imagine and shape the construction of the space and meaning of the city; finally, Part IV: Strategies and tactics uses categories for practices of control and resistance to investigate media and struggles for power within urban environments from surveillance and place-branding to activist media and the right to the city.

The Routledge Companion to Media and the City provides a definitive reference for both scholars and students of urban cultures and media within the humanities.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

How to do things with media and the city

part I|96 pages

Imaginaries and cityscapes

chapter 1|14 pages

Cinema as urban modeling

Understanding urban phenomena through fiction films

chapter 2|9 pages

Imagining migrants in cities

chapter 3|9 pages

“The Last Time I Saw Paris”

The contemporary Parisian omnibus film in context

chapter 4|9 pages

Backlot urbanism

The constructed New York City of How I Met Your Mother

chapter 7|12 pages

Skylines of the mind

How city building games reflect urban imaginations and shape urban realities

chapter 8|11 pages

Voicing new life

Prostitute reform and the socialist public sphere in 1950s Chinese cinema

part II|79 pages

Architectures and infrastructures

chapter 12|11 pages

The sportification of place

Governance, mediatization, and place-branding through the stadium

chapter 13|9 pages

Ambos Nogales Repair

Critical play and the infrastructures of the border city

chapter 14|13 pages

On emptiness

Spacing in media architecture

chapter 15|11 pages

Rethinking public projection as traction

The case of Imagining Publics (2019)

chapter 16|10 pages

Land use mapping and the topologies of a cinematic city

San Diego's backlots from 1985 to 2005

part III|106 pages

Development and redevelopment

chapter 17|14 pages

Masterplanning

Urban redevelopment and the racialization of American urban cinematic space

chapter 18|12 pages

A layered landscape of Western movie production

Combining geographical and historiographical methods at Old Tucson Studios

chapter 19|9 pages

At home in the metropolis

Reimagining Beijing and Shanghai in the 21st century

chapter 20|13 pages

The City at 42nd Street

chapter 21|13 pages

Dreaming, documenting, disturbing

Independent environmental film in 1970s West Berlin

chapter 24|9 pages

“City Stories”

Digital placemaking and public history in Singapore

chapter 25|11 pages

“What am I supposed to do with all these white people?”

Fifty years of gentrification anxiety on screen

part IV|78 pages

Strategies and tactics

chapter 26|10 pages

Studio urbanism

chapter 27|8 pages

Locational love and labor

Hollywood media production pre- and post-pandemic

chapter 28|12 pages

Who controls the media

The racial politics of public interest and local television in Detroit

chapter 29|13 pages

From extraterritoriality to extratemporality

Contemporary media and politics in Hong Kong

chapter 30|12 pages

Detroit diplomats represent

Hip hop, gentrification, and the city

chapter 31|10 pages

Rethinking micromobility as mobilities justice

Location-based traffic apps in Rio de Janeiro