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A terrifyingly important article about the gig / freelance economy...
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For Gioia himself, it’s made being a freelance man of letters – like his heroes from mid-century – much tougher. “I don’t think that’s possible anymore,” he says, as writing becomes unpaid volunteer work. “There are fewer gigs.” The number of papers with real book or ideas sections is down substantially; serious magazines are half the size they used to be. “If I’d quit my job this year, I don’t think I could have made it as a literary freelancer. The problem isn’t the decline of the economy, though that doesn’t help. The problem is the collapse of culture.”
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Not sure I agree that dynamiting Pruitt-Igoe in 1972 was the defining watershed moment - I think the impetus for archispeak is economic - but, regardless, Witold Rybczynski gives a conise critique of the beast...
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The destruction of the utopian "towers in a park" signaled the demise of heroic Modernism and its idealistic foray into social engineering. It also rattled the profession. What were architects to do? A few, such as I.M. Pei, soldiered on, seeking inspiration in a more monumental and stylish version of minimal Modernism. Some adopted Postmodernism, which turned out to be a short-lived fad. A few turned back to Classicism, while some, like Richard Rogers and Norman Foster, redefined architecture as an advanced technological craft.
Other architects, especially those teaching in universities, reacted to the collapse of Modernism by attempting to reinvent the field as a theoretical discipline. The theories did not come from the evidence of the practice of architecture, as one might expect (that was left to Christopher Alexander), but from arcane historical tracts and the writings of French literary critics in hermeneutics, poetics, and semiology. Thus began a new phase in professional jargon.
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Very worth reading, on "The Cities We Want," by Witold Rybczynski
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All the cities that have experienced vigorous population growth during the second half of the 20th century—Houston; Phoenix, Ariz.; Dallas; San Jose, Calif.; Atlanta, Ga.—have grown by spreading out. These are horizontal cities, with generally low population densities, typically fewer than 10 people per acre compared with 15 to 20 people per acre in the older, vertical cities. Horizontal cities depend on automobiles for mass transportation and on trucks for the movement of goods. In a horizontal city, the difference between city and suburb is indistinct. People in both live chiefly in individual houses rather than in flats or apartment buildings, and the houses are organized in dispersed, semi-autonomous planned communities that are different from the urban neighborhoods of the past. Versions of the dispersed city can be found in large cities such as Los Angeles, small cities such as Las Vegas, and in the metropolitan areas surrounding all cities, old and new.
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Shafer's subtitle says it all, "[Newspapers are] no longer the best providers of social currency." What's "social currency"? It's "the information we acquire and then trade—or give away—to start, maintain, and nurture relationships with our fellow humans."
In other words, it's no longer relevant to your interaction with friends and co-workers and other citizens whether or not you've all read the same newspaper that morning. There is other social currency that's more valuable, more interesting, more useful -- as currency.
In that sense, the "news" is secondary to "currency" / "value." It seems that newspapers need to figure out -- if they can, if it's possible -- how to leverage currency, not news.
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Not that long ago, the daily newspaper was an indispensable coiner of social currency, and it gave its readers piles of the stuff in each edition. The phrase, which comes from sociology, is often used to describe the information we acquire and then trade—or give away—to start, maintain, and nurture relationships with our fellow humans.
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Add Sticky NoteEven folks who don't care for sports skimmed the sports pages for a little something about the games and athletes so they could engage in essential small-talk.
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Yule Heibel on 2008-08-06- "currency"
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- 11 more annotation(s)...
Nice commentary on Witold Rybczynski's popular slide essay on Slate (see http://www.slate.com/id/2184927/). Good to see a native give some feedback on Rybczynski's take on Seattle library, too. I have to agree with David Brewster that the Salt Lake City Library is a knock-out: really gorgeous.
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