With contributions by Andrea Fischer-Tahir, Matthias Naumann, Eren Düzgün, Benjamin Zachariah, Thilo Lang, Tim Leibert, Alexandru Banica, Marinela Istrate, Daniel Tudora, Anja Reichert-Schick, Sabine Beisswenger, Thomas Bürk, Dolarice Sátyro Maia, Arian Mahzouni, Antía Mato Bouzas.
In: Informationsprojekt Naher und Mittlerer Osten: INAMO ; Berichte & Analysen zu Politik und Gesellschaft des Nahen und Mittleren Ostens, Band 17, Heft 67, S. 10-12
Wie auch andere Weltregionen wird der "Nahe Osten und Nordafrika" oftmals als eindeutig definierter, geschlossener und weitgehend homogener Raum betrachtet. Jedoch handelt es sich hier ebenfalls um eine Region, die ständigen Rekonfigurationen unterliegt und für die zudem eine Reihe von Bezeichnungen besteht. Zugleich entfalten sich wirtschaftliche, kulturelle, soziale und politische Verflechtungen und Austauschprozesse oftmals in völlig anderen regionalen Zusammenhängen, beispielsweise über den Indischen Ozean, die Sahara oder den Kaukasus hinweg, die quer zu verfestigten Raumvorstellungen liegen. Der Band wirbt für einen transregionalen Blick auf die Zirkulation von Gütern, Ideen und Menschen, ohne sich von etablierten Meta-Geographien begrenzen zu lassen. Damit positioniert er sich in kritischen Debatten um Raumproduktion und Area Studies und führt Forschung zusammen, die üblicherweise durch regional und disziplinär sortierte akademische Wissensproduktion getrennt ist.Mit Beiträgen vonDaniel C. Bach, Saïd Belguidoum, Katrin Bromber, Claudia Derichs, Andreas Eckl , Andrea Fischer-Tahir, Britta Frede, Ulrike Freitag, Albrecht Fuess, Dieter Haller, Jens Heibach, Béatrice von Hirschhausen, Tobias Koepf, Markus Koller, Laurence Marfaing, Matthias Middell, Amin Moghadam, Friederike Pannewick, Olivier Pliez, Dietrich Reetz, Florian Riedler, Heiko Schuß, Sarah Ruth Sippel, Katrin Sold, Julia Verne, Steffen Wippel.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
The concept of knowledge society has been invented by the social sciences in order to describe perspectives of modern societies. Nowadays the concept circulates increasingly in the political, educational, and economic field and in the media and has already crossed-over the geographical boundaries to which it had been applied first. Taking knowledge society as a representation serving to interpret and shape social practices, the paper outlines from an interdisciplinary perspective academic debates on the concepts and on notions of knowledge. The paper argues that certain paradigms of social progress and of science as inherent in knowledge society prevent « users » of the concept from considering contesting notions of knowledge, increasing forms of incoherent knowledge, and the accelerating devaluation of knowledge.
The concept of knowledge society has been invented by the social sciences in order to describe perspectives of modern societies. Nowadays the concept circulates increasingly in the political, educational, and economical field and in the media and has already crossed-over the geographical boundaries to which it had been applied first. Taking knowledge society as a representation serving to interpret and shape social practice, the paper outlines from an interdisciplinary perspective academic debates on the concepts and on notions of knowledge. The paper argues that certain paradigms of social progress and of science as inherent in knowledge society prevent "users" of the concept from considering contesting notions of knowledge, increasing forms of incoherent knowledge, and the accelerating devaluation of knowledge.
Frontmatter -- Acknowledgements -- Table of Contents -- Introduction: About Space as a Media Product -- Part I Cartographies -- 1. Mapping Empire: Knowledge Production and Government in the Nineteenth-Century Ottoman Empire -- 2. Who Maps Middle Eastern Geographies in the Digital Age? Inequalities in Web 2.0 Cartographies in Israel/Palestine -- 3. Taking the Battle to Cyberspace : Delineating Borders and Mapping Identities in Western Sahara -- 4. Wargaming the Middle East: The Evolution of Simulated Battlefields from Chequerboards to Virtual Worlds and Instrumented Artificial Cities -- Part II Movements -- 5. Iranian Internet Cinema, a Cinema of Embodied Protest : Imperfect, Amateur, Small, Unauthorized, Global -- 6. From Amateur Video to New Documentary Formats : Citizen Journalism and a Reconfiguring of Historical Knowledge -- 7. Cinematic Spaces of 'the Arab Street' : Mohamed Diab's Inverted Road Movie Clash (2016) -- 8. Body-Space-Relation in Parkour : Street Practices and Visual Representations -- 9. Mediated Narratives of Syrian Refugees : Mapping Victim-Threat Correlations in Turkish Newspapers -- Part III Agencies -- 10. Documenting Social Change and Political Unrest through Mobile Spaces and Locative Media -- 11. Reframing the Arab Spring : On Data Mining and the Field of Arab Internet Studies -- 12. Where is Iran? Politics between State and Nation , Inside and Outside the Polity -- 13. Mapping Genocide? Giving Visual Memory to Oral Culture -- 14. Reconfiguring the Kurdish Nation on YouTube : Spatial Imaginations, Revolutionary Lyrics, and Colonial Knowledge -- Index