01895pam a2200301 a 45000010008000000030008000080050017000160080041000330100017000740150019000910160018001100200035001280200034001630400047001970820020002441000023002642450039002872600065003263000024003913650014004155040031004295200978004606500022014386500026014606500021014866530031015077100055015383601364BD-DhUL20160410162538.0041208s2005 enka b 001 0 eng  a 2004029206 aGBA5380062bnb7 a0131895152Uk a0415317088 (cased) :c�50.00 a0415317096 (pbk.) :c�13.99 aDLCbengcDLCdDLCdOrLoB-BdVVUTdBD-DhUL04a307.76222bMOR1 aMoran, Joe,d1970-10aReading the everyday /cJoe Moran. aMilton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ;aNew York :bRoutledge,c2005. axi, 208 p. ;c24 cm aBDTb2315 aBibliography : p. 177-196.1 a"Drawing on the work of continental theorists such as Henri Lefebvre, Michel de Certeau, Marc Auge and Siegfried Kracauer, Joe Moran explores the concrete sites and routines of everyday life and their representation in political debate, news media, material culture, sitcoms, reality TV shows, photography, CCTV and webcams." "Moran aims to rethink notions of everyday life within cultural studies, which have traditionally focused on questions of popular culture, consumption and lifestyle. He investigates some of the most under-explored, banal aspects of quotidian culture, such as office life, commuting, car parking, motorways, new towns and mass housing." "Reading the Everyday shows that analysing supposedly 'boring' phenomena can help us to make sense of cultural and social change; and it argues that the everyday has become a space for a new kind of 'post-political' politics which has obscured profound changes in work, domestic and public space."--BOOK JACKET. 0aSociology, Urban. 0aCivilization, Modern. 0aPopular culture. aQuotidian;aEveryday life.2 aArts and Humanities Research Board (Great Britain)