Street Art, Public City
Law, Crime and the Urban Imagination
By Alison Young
To Be Published November 12th 2013 by Routledge – 208 pages
To Be Published November 12th 2013 by Routledge – 208 pages
This book investigates street art and graffiti as cultural practices at the borders of legality and illegality. Cities are engaged in a continual process of cultural production through which their self-image is developed and refined; a process that is sometimes legal – as with architecture, statuary, signage, advertising, and public art – and sometimes not – with practices such as billposting, graffiti and street art.
Alternately (and sometimes simultaneously) considered criminal, gentrifying, or commercial, street art exists and operates on the boundaries between the legal and illegal, and between art, crime, and culture. Given its capacity to generate discussion and polarise opinion, street art is a cultural practice that can inform us about the nature of urban life and the limits of public space.
Street Art, Public City: Law, Crime and the Urban Imagination draws upon fifteen years of research to examines the ways in which street art has become as integral part of cities’ cultural identities. It will be of interest to readers in the fields of street art and graffiti specifically, but also to those interested in issues relating to cities and urban space, legal geography, cultural criminology as well as cultural studies and art more generally.
Chapter 1 The Situational Artwork; encounter watching JR, Chapter 2 The Cities in the City; encounter criminal damage?, Chapter 3 Cityscapes; encounter losing the image, Chapter 4 Criminalising the Image; encounter things on walls, Chapter 5 Street Art and Spatial Politics; encounter Banksy under glass, Chapter 6 Transformations: Urban Imagination in the Public City, Bibliography, Index
Alison Young is Professor of Criminology at the University of Melbourne
Name: Street Art, Public City: Law, Crime and the Urban Imagination (Hardback) – Routledge
Description: By Alison Young. This book investigates street art and graffiti as cultural practices at the borders of legality and illegality. Cities are engaged in a continual process of cultural production through which their self-image is developed and refined; a process that is...
Categories: Socio-Legal Studies - Media & Cultural Studies, Cultural Criminology, Urban Sociology, Popular Culture, Subcultures, Cultural Geography, Urban Geography, Contemporary Art, Visual Culture, Popular Culture & Law, Criminology and Law, Fine Art