Port Cities as Areas of Transition
Ethnographic Perspectives
In the past decades, international port cities have been strongly affected by global transformation processes, dramatically altering life and work around the ports, the built environment and public imagery of urban waterfronts. Based on recent theories of city-port development, the ethnographic studies in this volume focus on local stakeholders' perceptions and strategies in port cities in Europe and Latin America. This book covers a wide variety of urban fields, from traditional dockland communities, inland waterway sailors and new forms of migration and exile, to active agents of urban transformation.
Overview Chapters
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Frontmatter
Seiten 1 - 4 -
Contents
Seiten 5 - 6 -
Port Cities as Areas of Transition - Comparative Ethnographic Research
Seiten 7 - 24 -
Transformation Processes on Waterfronts in Seaport Cities - Causes and Trends between Divergence and Convergence
Seiten 25 - 46 -
Notions on Community, Locality and Changing Space in the Dublin Docklands
Seiten 47 - 74 -
Old Town and Dock Area: Structural Changes in Ciudad Vieja of Montevideo
Seiten 75 - 98 -
A View from Port to City: Inland Waterway Sailors and City-Port Transformation in Hamburg
Seiten 99 - 110 -
"Gateway" City and Nexus Between Two Continents: The Port City of Algeciras
Seiten 111 - 124 -
Belém, "Gate of Amazonia" - Port and River as Crossroads
Seiten 125 - 144 -
Contesting Nodes of Migration and Trade in Public Space: Thessaloniki's Bazaar Economy
Seiten 145 - 168 -
Varna, Capital of the Sea: History, Image, and Waterfront Development
Seiten 169 - 188 -
"Istanbul Modern" - Urban Images, Planning Processes and the Production of Space in Istanbul's Port Area
Seiten 189 - 210 -
Authors
Seiten 211 - 212
27 August 2008, 212 pages
ISBN: 978-3-8394-0949-7
File size: 11.48 MB