Full Description
Radical Communications explores unauthorized messages we see in the cities we live in and their impact on the construction of social reality. Michael Tsangaris treats the city as a text and examines the political slogans, graffiti, and street art of Athens as complex visual signs in an alternative communication system. He argues that the legitimacy, aesthetic value, and social acceptability of these expressions depend on the time, place, and social group or individual that interprets them. Finally, his analysis reveals the contradictory character of the contemporary city. It shows a city of social inequalities, cultural diversity, multinational encounters; of conflicts between age groups and political, economic, and epidemic crises; a city of one-dimensional thinking, apathy, and consumer fetishism but also a city that aspires to the dream of a better society and holds utopian promise.
Contents
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1: Alternative media and the City
Chapter 2: Reflexing on unauthorized urban graphics
Chapter 3: Understanding unauthorized urban graphics
Chapter 4: Recuperation of unauthorized urban graphics
Chapter 5: Unauthorized urban graphics and gender
Chapter 6: A Psychogeographic research
Conclusion