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Feeling Place in the City: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media

Leighton Evans Orcid Logo

Code and the City, Pages: 105 - 115

Swansea University Author: Leighton Evans Orcid Logo

Abstract

Certain instances of the use of location-based social media in cities can result in deep understandings of novel locations. The contributions of other users and the information pushed to users when in particular locales can help users rapidly attune themselves to places and achieve an understanding...

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Published in: Code and the City
ISBN: 9781138922105
Published: Routledge 2016
Online Access: https://www.routledge.com/Code-and-the-City/Kitchin-Perng/p/book/9781138922112
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa37709
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first_indexed 2017-12-21T19:45:42Z
last_indexed 2018-05-18T13:08:19Z
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spelling 2018-05-18T07:47:09.7993709 v2 37709 2017-12-21 Feeling Place in the City: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media cc05810f3465ddddd6814e131f4e9a79 0000-0002-6875-6301 Leighton Evans Leighton Evans true false 2017-12-21 AMED Certain instances of the use of location-based social media in cities can result in deep understandings of novel locations. The contributions of other users and the information pushed to users when in particular locales can help users rapidly attune themselves to places and achieve an understanding of the place. The use of a computational device and location-based social networking to achieve this understanding indicates an alteration in the achievement of placehood using computational technology. Practices and methods of understanding place can, in some situations, be delegated to the device and application. This paper explores how the moment that place is appreciated as place (that is, as a meaningful existential locale) can be reconciled with the delegation of the epistemologies of placehood to a computational device and location-based social media application. Drawing on data from an ethnographic study of Foursquare users, the phenomenological appreciation of place is understood as co-constituent between the device, application and the mood of the user. Code and computational devices are contextualised as a constant foregrounding presence in the city, and the engagement of the user, device, code and data in understanding place is a moment of revealing that is co-constituent of all these elements. This exploratory paper engages Peter Sloterdijk’s theory of spheres as a framework to understand how these four elements interact, and how that interaction of elements can orient a user to a revealing of the city that can be understood as a phenomenological revealing of place. Book chapter Code and the City 105 115 Routledge 9781138922105 Foursquare, location-based social networking, phenomenology, Sloterdijk 6 4 2016 2016-04-06 https://www.routledge.com/Code-and-the-City/Kitchin-Perng/p/book/9781138922112 COLLEGE NANME Media COLLEGE CODE AMED Swansea University ERC 2018-05-18T07:47:09.7993709 2017-12-21T12:57:50.7578912 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - Media, Communications, Journalism and PR Leighton Evans 0000-0002-6875-6301 1
title Feeling Place in the City: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media
spellingShingle Feeling Place in the City: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media
Leighton Evans
title_short Feeling Place in the City: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media
title_full Feeling Place in the City: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media
title_fullStr Feeling Place in the City: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media
title_full_unstemmed Feeling Place in the City: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media
title_sort Feeling Place in the City: strange ontologies, Foursquare and location-based social media
author_id_str_mv cc05810f3465ddddd6814e131f4e9a79
author_id_fullname_str_mv cc05810f3465ddddd6814e131f4e9a79_***_Leighton Evans
author Leighton Evans
author2 Leighton Evans
format Book chapter
container_title Code and the City
container_start_page 105
publishDate 2016
institution Swansea University
isbn 9781138922105
publisher Routledge
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str School of Culture and Communication - Media, Communications, Journalism and PR{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - Media, Communications, Journalism and PR
url https://www.routledge.com/Code-and-the-City/Kitchin-Perng/p/book/9781138922112
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description Certain instances of the use of location-based social media in cities can result in deep understandings of novel locations. The contributions of other users and the information pushed to users when in particular locales can help users rapidly attune themselves to places and achieve an understanding of the place. The use of a computational device and location-based social networking to achieve this understanding indicates an alteration in the achievement of placehood using computational technology. Practices and methods of understanding place can, in some situations, be delegated to the device and application. This paper explores how the moment that place is appreciated as place (that is, as a meaningful existential locale) can be reconciled with the delegation of the epistemologies of placehood to a computational device and location-based social media application. Drawing on data from an ethnographic study of Foursquare users, the phenomenological appreciation of place is understood as co-constituent between the device, application and the mood of the user. Code and computational devices are contextualised as a constant foregrounding presence in the city, and the engagement of the user, device, code and data in understanding place is a moment of revealing that is co-constituent of all these elements. This exploratory paper engages Peter Sloterdijk’s theory of spheres as a framework to understand how these four elements interact, and how that interaction of elements can orient a user to a revealing of the city that can be understood as a phenomenological revealing of place.
published_date 2016-04-06T03:47:31Z
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score 10.999547