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Pirate Modernity Ravi Sundaram (The Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi, India)

Pirate Modernity By Ravi Sundaram (The Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi, India)

Summary

Focusing on the culture of piracy in the Indian capital, this book looks at what has happened to the city in the wake of the dissemination of the new media and the ways in which it has, and will, affect urban cultures in an age of globalization.

Pirate Modernity Summary

Pirate Modernity: Delhi's Media Urbanism by Ravi Sundaram (The Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi, India)

Using Delhi's contemporary history as a site for reflection, Pirate Modernity moves from a detailed discussion of the technocratic design of the city by US planners in the 1950s, to the massive expansions after 1977, culminating in the urban crisis of the 1990s. As a practice, pirate modernity is an illicit form of urban globalization. Poorer urban populations increasingly inhabit non-legal spheres: unauthorized neighborhoods, squatter camps and bypass legal technological infrastructures (media, electricity). This pirate culture produces a significant enabling resource for subaltern populations unable to enter the legal city. Equally, this is an unstable world, bringing subaltern populations into the harsh glare of permanent technological visibility, and attacks by urban elites, courts and visceral media industries. The book examines contemporary Delhi from some of these sites: the unmaking of the citys modernist planning design, new technological urban networks that bypass states and corporations, and the tragic experience of the road accident terrifyingly enhanced by technological culture. Pirate Modernity moves between past and present, along with debates in Asia, Africa and Latin America on urbanism, media culture, and everyday life.

This pioneering book suggests cities have to be revisited afresh after proliferating media culture. Pirate Modernity boldly draws from urban and cultural theory to open a new agenda for a world after media urbanism.

Pirate Modernity Reviews

Defining 'pirate modernity' as a non-legal form of digital life, Sundaram describes the web of social, political, and cultural circuits that circulate the new media in the urban landscape. Empirically rich and interpretively ambitious, Pirate Modernity sparkles with brilliant insights on postcolonial urbanism. There is no work like this.

Gyan Prakash, Dayton-Stockton Professor of History at Princeton University, USA

Ravi Sundaram is the one-stop theorist for uncompromised urban media theory. Ever since our 1996 encounter at 5CyberConf in Madrid, I was struck by his dry descriptions of India's hypermodernity. Beyond good and evil Sundaram theorizes the everyday life of our science fiction age. Follow Sundaram into a grey world, ready to be conceptualized. The dusty electronics of the Indian metropole painted out here prove that we have surpassed linear development models and are entering the age of messy politics. Pirate modernity is our integral reality. It is raw and digital. Vital and illegal. Poor and fast.

Geert Lovink, Dutch-Australian media theorist

Pirate Modernity is Ravi Sundaram's sparkling, ambivalent homage to the technological modernity that comes not from the high table of national policy makers and planners but from a new technopolis that now constitutes the underside of everyday life in a city. It is there that the 'visceral' presence of technology, often in the form of seductive technofragments, allows media to shape a whole range of urban experience-from violence, crime and displacement to protest, resistance and new forms of imagination and materiality.

Ashis Nandy, Director of the Center for the Study of Developing Societies , Delhi.

About Ravi Sundaram (The Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi, India)

Ravi Sundaram

Table of Contents

Introduction: After Media 1. A City of Order: The Masterplan 2. Media Urbanism 3. The Pirate Kingdom 4. Death and the Accident. Conclusion: An Information City?

Additional information

NPB9780415409667
9780415409667
0415409667
Pirate Modernity: Delhi's Media Urbanism by Ravi Sundaram (The Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi, India)
New
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2009-07-30
224
N/A
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