Strange Topography: Globalization at Ground Zero

Authors

  • Vincent Mosco

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30962/ec.111

Keywords:

Globalização, Paisagem urbana, Desigualdade, Projeto pós-industrial, World Trade Center

Abstract

This article, which is based on the keynote presentation delivered at the 2006 Conference of the Canadian Communication Association in Toronto, discusses the interplay between globalization and cities, using as the main illustration the trajectory of the World Trade Center in Manhattan, from its planning in the early sixties until its rebuilding initiatives today. The myth of a positive globalization with all its contradictions, and the threats presented by post-industrial projects to the urban landscape are explored via critical analyses of Negroponte’s “digital revolution”, its connection to fundamentalist religion, as well as the politics and economics involving the development of Lower Manhattan after the Second World War.

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How to Cite

Mosco, V. (2006). Strange Topography: Globalization at Ground Zero. E-Compós, 7. https://doi.org/10.30962/ec.111

Issue

Section

Special Issue