Consuming Scenography
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Consuming Scenography
The Shopping Mall as a Theatrical Experience
Tabacki, Nebojsa
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
01/2022
208
Mole
Inglês
9781350246669
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Introducing Consuming Scenography
1 Staging Consumer Seduction: A Brief History
1.1 The market enclosure as a scenographic principle
1.2 Industrialising pleasure: Shopping arcades and department stores
1.3 Post-war functionalism: Shopping malls
2 Framing Consumption in Late Capitalism
2.1 Entertainment, please!
2.2 Theming the identity of consumption
2.3 Drama on sale
3 Themed Malls as a Global Trend
3.1 Make me look older: Montecasino
3.2 Shopping for education: The Ibn Battuta Mall
3.3 A boat trip to fantasy land: The Villaggio Mall
3.4 Have a safe flight: Terminal 21
4 Producing Experience
4.1 The magic of Disneyization
4.2 Technological wizardry
4.3 Aquatic fairy tales
5 Consuming Experience
5.1 Flaneurs or active consumers?
5.2 Surface semiotics
5.3 The body in the forged reality
6 The Deceitful Charm of Scenography
6.1 The echoes of history
6.2 The aesthetic universe
6.3 Social interaction with a price tag
6.4 Public space as a political stage
7 Spatial Flexibility: A Yearning
7.1 The fluidity of market changes
7.2 Flexibility matters
7.3 Double-crossed by urban dreams
7.4 Responsibility in the final act
Notes
References
Index
Acknowledgements
Introducing Consuming Scenography
1 Staging Consumer Seduction: A Brief History
1.1 The market enclosure as a scenographic principle
1.2 Industrialising pleasure: Shopping arcades and department stores
1.3 Post-war functionalism: Shopping malls
2 Framing Consumption in Late Capitalism
2.1 Entertainment, please!
2.2 Theming the identity of consumption
2.3 Drama on sale
3 Themed Malls as a Global Trend
3.1 Make me look older: Montecasino
3.2 Shopping for education: The Ibn Battuta Mall
3.3 A boat trip to fantasy land: The Villaggio Mall
3.4 Have a safe flight: Terminal 21
4 Producing Experience
4.1 The magic of Disneyization
4.2 Technological wizardry
4.3 Aquatic fairy tales
5 Consuming Experience
5.1 Flaneurs or active consumers?
5.2 Surface semiotics
5.3 The body in the forged reality
6 The Deceitful Charm of Scenography
6.1 The echoes of history
6.2 The aesthetic universe
6.3 Social interaction with a price tag
6.4 Public space as a political stage
7 Spatial Flexibility: A Yearning
7.1 The fluidity of market changes
7.2 Flexibility matters
7.3 Double-crossed by urban dreams
7.4 Responsibility in the final act
Notes
References
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Introducing Consuming Scenography
1 Staging Consumer Seduction: A Brief History
1.1 The market enclosure as a scenographic principle
1.2 Industrialising pleasure: Shopping arcades and department stores
1.3 Post-war functionalism: Shopping malls
2 Framing Consumption in Late Capitalism
2.1 Entertainment, please!
2.2 Theming the identity of consumption
2.3 Drama on sale
3 Themed Malls as a Global Trend
3.1 Make me look older: Montecasino
3.2 Shopping for education: The Ibn Battuta Mall
3.3 A boat trip to fantasy land: The Villaggio Mall
3.4 Have a safe flight: Terminal 21
4 Producing Experience
4.1 The magic of Disneyization
4.2 Technological wizardry
4.3 Aquatic fairy tales
5 Consuming Experience
5.1 Flaneurs or active consumers?
5.2 Surface semiotics
5.3 The body in the forged reality
6 The Deceitful Charm of Scenography
6.1 The echoes of history
6.2 The aesthetic universe
6.3 Social interaction with a price tag
6.4 Public space as a political stage
7 Spatial Flexibility: A Yearning
7.1 The fluidity of market changes
7.2 Flexibility matters
7.3 Double-crossed by urban dreams
7.4 Responsibility in the final act
Notes
References
Index
Acknowledgements
Introducing Consuming Scenography
1 Staging Consumer Seduction: A Brief History
1.1 The market enclosure as a scenographic principle
1.2 Industrialising pleasure: Shopping arcades and department stores
1.3 Post-war functionalism: Shopping malls
2 Framing Consumption in Late Capitalism
2.1 Entertainment, please!
2.2 Theming the identity of consumption
2.3 Drama on sale
3 Themed Malls as a Global Trend
3.1 Make me look older: Montecasino
3.2 Shopping for education: The Ibn Battuta Mall
3.3 A boat trip to fantasy land: The Villaggio Mall
3.4 Have a safe flight: Terminal 21
4 Producing Experience
4.1 The magic of Disneyization
4.2 Technological wizardry
4.3 Aquatic fairy tales
5 Consuming Experience
5.1 Flaneurs or active consumers?
5.2 Surface semiotics
5.3 The body in the forged reality
6 The Deceitful Charm of Scenography
6.1 The echoes of history
6.2 The aesthetic universe
6.3 Social interaction with a price tag
6.4 Public space as a political stage
7 Spatial Flexibility: A Yearning
7.1 The fluidity of market changes
7.2 Flexibility matters
7.3 Double-crossed by urban dreams
7.4 Responsibility in the final act
Notes
References
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.