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E-book: Everyday Globalization: A Spatial Semiotics of Immigrant Neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Paris

(Brooklyn College, USA)
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Everyday Globalization is a micro-sociological study of immigrant neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Paris. Global flows of people bring together cultural practices from distant places and urban dwellers in global cities interpret the signs of collective identity in ascribing particular places as "immigrant neighborhoods." This book examines the spatial semiotics of identity in urban public space that make this possible. Unlike other studies of globalization and cities, this work brings together research on the social psychology of groups, linguistic landscapes, and quotidian mobility to explain how urban dwellers encounter cultural differences. Signs of social identity are always interpreted in the context of group boundaries and the appropriation of public space. The breadth of this analysis contributes to the literature in human geography on the meaningfulness of places. This book will also be of interest to scholars and students in visual sociology. In addition, this research demonstrates an innovative method for studying everyday urban experience.

List of Figures
ix
Acknowledgments xi
1 Introduction: Everyday Globalization
1(27)
2 Collective Identity in a Globalized World
28(24)
3 Semiotics of Urban Public Spaces
52(37)
4 Coney Island Avenue: Multicultural Brooklyn
89(18)
5 Belleville to La Goutte d'Or: Around the World in Paris
107(20)
6 Food and Shopping
127(22)
7 Dress and Appearance
149(28)
8 Social Interaction
177(27)
9 Conclusions: Seeing Immigrant Neighborhoods
204(29)
Index 233
Timothy Shortell is professor of sociology at Brooklyn College, City University of New York.