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Participatory Culture and the Social Value of an Architectural Icon: Sydney Opera House

Author/EditorFreeman , Cristina Garduno (Author)
ISBN: 9781472469892
Pub Date20/09/2017
BindingHardback
Pages222
Dimensions (mm)246(h) * 174(w)
This book develops new and innovative methods for understanding the cultural significance of places such as World Heritage listed Sydney Opera House. By connecting participatory media, visual culture and social value, architectural academic Garduno Freeman contributes to a growing body of scholarship on the popular reception of architecture.
¥24,368
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This book develops new and innovative methods for understanding the cultural significance of places such as the World Heritage listed Sydney Opera House. By connecting participatory media, visual culture and social value, Cristina Garduno Freeman contributes to a fast-growing body of scholarship on digital heritage and the popular reception of architecture.

In this, her first book, she opens up a fresh perspective on heritage, as well as the ways in which people relate to architecture via participation on social media. Social media sites such as YouTube, Pinterest, Wikipedia, Facebook and Flickr, as well as others, become places for people to express their connections with places, for example, the Sydney Opera House. Garduno Freeman analyses real-world examples, from souvenirs to opera-house-shaped cakes, and untangles the tangible and intangible ways in which the significance of heritage is created, disseminated and maintained.

As people's encounters with World Heritage become increasingly mediated by the digital sphere there is a growing imperative for academics, professionals and policy-makers to understand the social value of significant places. This book is beneficial to academics, students and professionals of architecture.

This book develops new and innovative methods for understanding the cultural significance of places such as the World Heritage listed Sydney Opera House. By connecting participatory media, visual culture and social value, Cristina Garduno Freeman contributes to a fast-growing body of scholarship on digital heritage and the popular reception of architecture.

In this, her first book, she opens up a fresh perspective on heritage, as well as the ways in which people relate to architecture via participation on social media. Social media sites such as YouTube, Pinterest, Wikipedia, Facebook and Flickr, as well as others, become places for people to express their connections with places, for example, the Sydney Opera House. Garduno Freeman analyses real-world examples, from souvenirs to opera-house-shaped cakes, and untangles the tangible and intangible ways in which the significance of heritage is created, disseminated and maintained.

As people's encounters with World Heritage become increasingly mediated by the digital sphere there is a growing imperative for academics, professionals and policy-makers to understand the social value of significant places. This book is beneficial to academics, students and professionals of architecture.

Cristina Garduno Freeman is emerging as a leader in the participatory culture and social value of iconic architecture. Her interdisciplinary work sits at the intersection of heritage, architecture and digital media. Currently, she is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Australian Centre for Architectural History, Urban and Cultural Heritage (ACAHUCH) at the University of Melbourne, Australia. This is her first book.

Introduction, 1. World Heritage Inscription and Social Value, 2. Social Value and Iconicity, 3. Participatory Culture and Socio-Visual Value, 4. Mediating Identity: Telling and Critiquing, 5. Mediating Experience: Making and Trading, 6. Mediating Time: Visiting and Capturing, 7. Entangled Significance: Personal Tributes, 8. Recognising Networked Significance in Heritage

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