1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910678256603321

Titolo

Gated communities and the digital polis : rethinking subjectivity, reality, exclusion, and cooperation in an urban future / / Kon Kim and Heewon Chung, editors

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Singapore : , : Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd, , [2023]

©2023

ISBN

981-19-9685-7

Edizione

[1st ed. 2023.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (208 pages)

Collana

Advances in 21st Century Human Settlements Series

Disciplina

307.77

Soggetti

Gated communities

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Introduction - The digital polis and its practices: Beyond gated communities -- Digital polis and the ‘safe’ feminism: Focusing on the strategies of direct punishment and gated community -- Toward digital polis: Gendered data (in)justice and data activism in South Korea -- Subjection or subjectification: representation of 'networked individuals' in Korean web novels -- Digital polis and urban commons: Justice beyond the gated community -- Production and reproduction of space and culture in the virtual realm: Gated communities as the imaginary, intermediary and real spaces -- The ghettoised city and the affect of anxiety in Park Wan-soe’s ‘apartment novels’ -- Spatial and digital fortressing of apartment complexes in Seoul: Two case studies -- Inclusion, exclusion, and participation in digital polis: Double-edged development of poor urban communities in alternative smart city-making -- Online-based food hubs for community health and well-being: Performance in practice and its implications for urban design -- Third places: The social infrastructure of the smart city. .

Sommario/riassunto

This edited collection provides an alternative discourse on cities evolving with physically and virtually networked communities—the ‘digital polis’—and offers a variety of perspectives from the humanities, media studies, geography, architecture, and urban studies. As an emergent concept that encompasses research and practice, the digital polis is oriented toward a counter-mapping of the digital cityscape



beyond policing and gatekeeping in physical and virtual gated communities. Considering the digital polis as offering potential for active support of socially just and politically inclusive urban circumstances in ways that mirror the Greek polis, our attention is drawn towards the interweaving of the development of digital technology, urban space, and social dynamics. The four parts of this book address the formation of technosocial subjectivity, real-and-virtual combined urbanity, the spatial dimensions of digital exclusion and inclusion, and the prospect of emancipatory and empowering digital citizens. Individual chapters cover varied topics on digital feminism, data activism, networked individualism, digital commons, real-virtual communalism, the post-family imagination, digital fortress cities, rights to the smart city, online foodscapes, and open-source urbanism across the globe. Contributors explore the following questions: what developments can be found over recent decades in both physical and virtual communities such as cyberspace, and what will our urban future be like? What is the ‘digital polis’ and what kinds of new subjectivity does it produce? How does digital technology, as well as its virtuality, reshape the city and our spatial awareness of it? What kinds of exclusion and cooperation are at work in communities and spaces in the digital age? Each chapter responds to these questions in its own way, navigating readers through routes toward the digital polis. Chapter "Introduction - The digital polis and its practices: Beyond gated communities" is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.