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Night Shift: rethinking and reclaiming the city after dark?

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

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Night Shift: rethinking and reclaiming the city after dark? / Dunn, Nick.
2021. Paper presented at Augmented Cities - Where did the night go?, Berlin, Berlin, Germany.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Harvard

Dunn, N 2021, 'Night Shift: rethinking and reclaiming the city after dark?', Paper presented at Augmented Cities - Where did the night go?, Berlin, Germany, 21/04/21 - 23/04/21.

APA

Dunn, N. (2021). Night Shift: rethinking and reclaiming the city after dark?. Paper presented at Augmented Cities - Where did the night go?, Berlin, Berlin, Germany.

Vancouver

Dunn N. Night Shift: rethinking and reclaiming the city after dark?. 2021. Paper presented at Augmented Cities - Where did the night go?, Berlin, Berlin, Germany.

Author

Dunn, Nick. / Night Shift : rethinking and reclaiming the city after dark?. Paper presented at Augmented Cities - Where did the night go?, Berlin, Berlin, Germany.

Bibtex

@conference{ff17e5a7b27f4a2d9deca884f7fe1530,
title = "Night Shift: rethinking and reclaiming the city after dark?",
abstract = "The 24/7 gig economy is sharpening existing inequalities and consolidating them around the clock due to the just-in-time convenience that the digitally-networked city provides. For some it is the end of sleep within the traditional timeframe of night. Meanwhile, banished by more and more artificial lighting at night, darkness is fast becoming a sought-after luxury by those that can afford it. Until recently, the need and desire to manage and control the urban night led to the spatialisation of its economy, driven by practices of consumption. However, the coronavirus pandemic has physically manifest itself in different ways through forms of lockdown, restriction, and curfew. In the UK, this has meant the nocturnal city has temporarily been the domain of assigned key workers, with a degree of this labour operating precariously. Emptied of much of the previous business that operated in cities at night and its spectacle prior to the pandemic, nocturnal urban landscapes in lockdown offer a distinct place and time through which we might reconsider the city at night. This paper, therefore, seeks to respond to the following themes: urban development and the 24-hour city; light pollution, expansion of digital nocturnal infrastructures; and cultural expressions and narratives of the night/24-hour city. Manchester, UK, is undergoing extensive replacement of its 56,000 streetlights with LED bulbs. This comprehensive rollout is based on energy-saving and resultant economic savings. But such strategies belie the differences and resistances to such transformation that persist. This paper draws upon ongoing autoethnographic fieldwork and collaborative practices based in the city to explore the entanglements between light and dark, work and respite, cost and benefit, creativity and place. Given the global onslaught of over-illumination and the malign social, health, environmental and aesthetic affects this continues to perpetrate, how can we rethink and reclaim the city after dark? ",
keywords = "Night, Labour, Gig Economy, Pandemic, Light Pollution, Darkness, Health, Creativity, Urbanism",
author = "Nick Dunn",
year = "2021",
month = apr,
day = "23",
language = "English",
note = "Augmented Cities - Where did the night go? : Night spaces: migration, culture and integration in Europe (NITE) ; Conference date: 21-04-2021 Through 23-04-2021",
url = "https://www.euroethno.hu-berlin.de/de/termine/augmented-cities",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Night Shift

T2 - Augmented Cities - Where did the night go?

AU - Dunn, Nick

PY - 2021/4/23

Y1 - 2021/4/23

N2 - The 24/7 gig economy is sharpening existing inequalities and consolidating them around the clock due to the just-in-time convenience that the digitally-networked city provides. For some it is the end of sleep within the traditional timeframe of night. Meanwhile, banished by more and more artificial lighting at night, darkness is fast becoming a sought-after luxury by those that can afford it. Until recently, the need and desire to manage and control the urban night led to the spatialisation of its economy, driven by practices of consumption. However, the coronavirus pandemic has physically manifest itself in different ways through forms of lockdown, restriction, and curfew. In the UK, this has meant the nocturnal city has temporarily been the domain of assigned key workers, with a degree of this labour operating precariously. Emptied of much of the previous business that operated in cities at night and its spectacle prior to the pandemic, nocturnal urban landscapes in lockdown offer a distinct place and time through which we might reconsider the city at night. This paper, therefore, seeks to respond to the following themes: urban development and the 24-hour city; light pollution, expansion of digital nocturnal infrastructures; and cultural expressions and narratives of the night/24-hour city. Manchester, UK, is undergoing extensive replacement of its 56,000 streetlights with LED bulbs. This comprehensive rollout is based on energy-saving and resultant economic savings. But such strategies belie the differences and resistances to such transformation that persist. This paper draws upon ongoing autoethnographic fieldwork and collaborative practices based in the city to explore the entanglements between light and dark, work and respite, cost and benefit, creativity and place. Given the global onslaught of over-illumination and the malign social, health, environmental and aesthetic affects this continues to perpetrate, how can we rethink and reclaim the city after dark?

AB - The 24/7 gig economy is sharpening existing inequalities and consolidating them around the clock due to the just-in-time convenience that the digitally-networked city provides. For some it is the end of sleep within the traditional timeframe of night. Meanwhile, banished by more and more artificial lighting at night, darkness is fast becoming a sought-after luxury by those that can afford it. Until recently, the need and desire to manage and control the urban night led to the spatialisation of its economy, driven by practices of consumption. However, the coronavirus pandemic has physically manifest itself in different ways through forms of lockdown, restriction, and curfew. In the UK, this has meant the nocturnal city has temporarily been the domain of assigned key workers, with a degree of this labour operating precariously. Emptied of much of the previous business that operated in cities at night and its spectacle prior to the pandemic, nocturnal urban landscapes in lockdown offer a distinct place and time through which we might reconsider the city at night. This paper, therefore, seeks to respond to the following themes: urban development and the 24-hour city; light pollution, expansion of digital nocturnal infrastructures; and cultural expressions and narratives of the night/24-hour city. Manchester, UK, is undergoing extensive replacement of its 56,000 streetlights with LED bulbs. This comprehensive rollout is based on energy-saving and resultant economic savings. But such strategies belie the differences and resistances to such transformation that persist. This paper draws upon ongoing autoethnographic fieldwork and collaborative practices based in the city to explore the entanglements between light and dark, work and respite, cost and benefit, creativity and place. Given the global onslaught of over-illumination and the malign social, health, environmental and aesthetic affects this continues to perpetrate, how can we rethink and reclaim the city after dark?

KW - Night

KW - Labour

KW - Gig Economy

KW - Pandemic

KW - Light Pollution

KW - Darkness

KW - Health

KW - Creativity

KW - Urbanism

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 21 April 2021 through 23 April 2021

ER -