Graham, Stephen. "Cities as battlespace: the new military urbanism." City 13....Stephen Graham
Graham, Stephen. "Cities as battlespace: the new military urbanism." City 13.4 (2009): 383-402.
The latest in an ongoing series of papers on the links between militarism and urbanism published in City, this paper opens with an exploration of the emerging crossovers between the ‘targeting’ of everyday life in so-called ‘smart’ border and ‘homeland security’ programmes and related efforts to delegate the sovereign power to deploy lethal force to increasingly robotized and automated war machines. Arguing that both cases represent examples of a new military urbanism, the rest of the paper develops a thesis outlining the scope and power of contemporary interpenetrations between urbanism and militarism. The new military urbanism is defined as encompassing a complex set of rapidly evolving ideas, doctrines, practices, norms, techniques and popular cultural arenas through which the everyday spaces, sites and infrastructures of cities—along with their civilian populations— are now rendered as the main targets and threats within a limitless ‘battlespace’. The new military urbanism, it is argued, rests on five related pillars; these are explored in turn. Included here are the normalization of militarized practices of tracking and targeting everyday urban circulations; the two-way movement of political, juridical and technologi- cal techniques between ‘homeland’ cities and cities on colonial frontiers; the rapid growth of sprawling, transnational industrial complexes fusing military and security companies with technology, surveillance and entertainment ones; the deployment of political violence against and through everyday urban infrastructure by both states and non-state fighters; and the increasingly seamless fusing of militarized veins of popular, urban and material culture. The paper finishes by discussing the new political imaginations demanded by the new military urbanism.
Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)Stephen Graham
Humans, increasingly, manufacturer their own air. In and around the three-dimensional aerial environments within and above urban regions, this manufacture of air reaches particular levels of intensity. For a species which expires without air in two or three minutes, this anthropogenic manufacture of air is of incalculable importance. Curiously, however, urban air remains remarkably neglected within the political-ecological literatures. Accordingly, this paper suggests a range of key themes which a political ecology of urban air needs to address. These address, in turn, the links between global warming, urban heart-island effects and killer urban heat-waves; urban pollution crises; the paradoxes of urban pollution; horizontal movements of polluted air; the vertical politics of urban air; the construction of vertical condominiums structures for elites; the vicious circles that characterised air-conditioned urbanism; heat-related deaths of workers building air-conditioned structures in increasingly hot climates; and, finally, the growth of large-scale air-conditioned environments.
This presentation is a call for critical urban research to address the vertical as well as horizontal aspects of social inequality. It seeks, in particular, to explore the important but neglected causal connection between the demonisation and dismantling of social housing towers constructed in many cities between the 1930s and 1970s and the contemporary proliferation of
radically different housing towers produced for socio-economic elites. The argument begins with a critical discussion of the economistic orthodoxy, derived from the work of Edward
Glaeser, that contemporary housing crises are best addressed by removing state intervention
in housing production so that market-driven verticalisation can take place. The following two sections connect the rise of such orthodoxy with the ‘manufactured reality’—so
central to neo-liberal urban orthodoxy—that vertical social housing must necessarily fail because it deterministically creates social pathology. The remainder of the paper explores
in detail how the dominance of these narratives have been central to elite takeovers, and ‘luxification’, of the urban skies through the proliferation of condo towers for the super-rich.
Case studies are drawn from Vancouver, New York, London, Mumbai and Guatemala City and the broader vertical cultural and visual politics of the process are explored. The discussion finishes by exploring the challenges involved in contesting, and dismantling, the hegemonic dominance of vertical housing by elite interests in contemporary cities.
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fictionStephen Graham
Unerringly, across its whole history, urban science fiction has offered up imagined cities that
operate about remarkably similar and highly verticalised visions. These are heavily dominated
by politics of class, resistance and revolution that are starkly organized around vertically
stratified and vertically exaggerated urban spaces. From the early and definitive efforts
of H.G. Wells and Fritz Lang, through J.G. Ballard’s 1975 novel High Rise, to many cyberpunk
classics, this essay – the latest in a series in City on the vertical dimensions of cities1 –
reflects on how vertical imaginaries in urban science fiction intersect with the politics and
contestations of the fast-verticalising cities around the world. The essay has four parts. It
begins by disentangling in detail the ways in which the sci-fi visions of Wells, Lang,
Ballard and various cyberpunk authors were centrally constituted through vertical structures,
landscapes, metaphors and allegories. The essay’s second part then teases out the
complex linkages between verticalised sci-fi imaginaries and material cityscapes that are
actually constructed, lived and experienced. Stressing the impossibility of some clean and
binary opposition between ‘factual’ and ‘fictional’ cities, the essay explores how verticalised
projects, material cities, sci-fi texts, imaginary futures, architectural schemes and urban theories
mingle and resonate together in complex, unpredictable and important ways which do
much to shape contemporary urban landscapes. The third section of the essay explores such
connections through the cases of retro-futuristic urban megaprojects in the Gulf and forests
of towers recently constructed in Shanghai’s Pudong district. The essay’s final discussion
draws on these cases to explore the possibilities that sci-fi imaginaries offer for contesting
the rapid verticalisation of cities around the world.
Graham, Stephen. "Cities as battlespace: the new military urbanism." City 13....Stephen Graham
Graham, Stephen. "Cities as battlespace: the new military urbanism." City 13.4 (2009): 383-402.
The latest in an ongoing series of papers on the links between militarism and urbanism published in City, this paper opens with an exploration of the emerging crossovers between the ‘targeting’ of everyday life in so-called ‘smart’ border and ‘homeland security’ programmes and related efforts to delegate the sovereign power to deploy lethal force to increasingly robotized and automated war machines. Arguing that both cases represent examples of a new military urbanism, the rest of the paper develops a thesis outlining the scope and power of contemporary interpenetrations between urbanism and militarism. The new military urbanism is defined as encompassing a complex set of rapidly evolving ideas, doctrines, practices, norms, techniques and popular cultural arenas through which the everyday spaces, sites and infrastructures of cities—along with their civilian populations— are now rendered as the main targets and threats within a limitless ‘battlespace’. The new military urbanism, it is argued, rests on five related pillars; these are explored in turn. Included here are the normalization of militarized practices of tracking and targeting everyday urban circulations; the two-way movement of political, juridical and technologi- cal techniques between ‘homeland’ cities and cities on colonial frontiers; the rapid growth of sprawling, transnational industrial complexes fusing military and security companies with technology, surveillance and entertainment ones; the deployment of political violence against and through everyday urban infrastructure by both states and non-state fighters; and the increasingly seamless fusing of militarized veins of popular, urban and material culture. The paper finishes by discussing the new political imaginations demanded by the new military urbanism.
Life support the political ecology of urban air (Paper)Stephen Graham
Humans, increasingly, manufacturer their own air. In and around the three-dimensional aerial environments within and above urban regions, this manufacture of air reaches particular levels of intensity. For a species which expires without air in two or three minutes, this anthropogenic manufacture of air is of incalculable importance. Curiously, however, urban air remains remarkably neglected within the political-ecological literatures. Accordingly, this paper suggests a range of key themes which a political ecology of urban air needs to address. These address, in turn, the links between global warming, urban heart-island effects and killer urban heat-waves; urban pollution crises; the paradoxes of urban pollution; horizontal movements of polluted air; the vertical politics of urban air; the construction of vertical condominiums structures for elites; the vicious circles that characterised air-conditioned urbanism; heat-related deaths of workers building air-conditioned structures in increasingly hot climates; and, finally, the growth of large-scale air-conditioned environments.
This presentation is a call for critical urban research to address the vertical as well as horizontal aspects of social inequality. It seeks, in particular, to explore the important but neglected causal connection between the demonisation and dismantling of social housing towers constructed in many cities between the 1930s and 1970s and the contemporary proliferation of
radically different housing towers produced for socio-economic elites. The argument begins with a critical discussion of the economistic orthodoxy, derived from the work of Edward
Glaeser, that contemporary housing crises are best addressed by removing state intervention
in housing production so that market-driven verticalisation can take place. The following two sections connect the rise of such orthodoxy with the ‘manufactured reality’—so
central to neo-liberal urban orthodoxy—that vertical social housing must necessarily fail because it deterministically creates social pathology. The remainder of the paper explores
in detail how the dominance of these narratives have been central to elite takeovers, and ‘luxification’, of the urban skies through the proliferation of condo towers for the super-rich.
Case studies are drawn from Vancouver, New York, London, Mumbai and Guatemala City and the broader vertical cultural and visual politics of the process are explored. The discussion finishes by exploring the challenges involved in contesting, and dismantling, the hegemonic dominance of vertical housing by elite interests in contemporary cities.
Vertical noir: Histories of the future in urban science fictionStephen Graham
Unerringly, across its whole history, urban science fiction has offered up imagined cities that
operate about remarkably similar and highly verticalised visions. These are heavily dominated
by politics of class, resistance and revolution that are starkly organized around vertically
stratified and vertically exaggerated urban spaces. From the early and definitive efforts
of H.G. Wells and Fritz Lang, through J.G. Ballard’s 1975 novel High Rise, to many cyberpunk
classics, this essay – the latest in a series in City on the vertical dimensions of cities1 –
reflects on how vertical imaginaries in urban science fiction intersect with the politics and
contestations of the fast-verticalising cities around the world. The essay has four parts. It
begins by disentangling in detail the ways in which the sci-fi visions of Wells, Lang,
Ballard and various cyberpunk authors were centrally constituted through vertical structures,
landscapes, metaphors and allegories. The essay’s second part then teases out the
complex linkages between verticalised sci-fi imaginaries and material cityscapes that are
actually constructed, lived and experienced. Stressing the impossibility of some clean and
binary opposition between ‘factual’ and ‘fictional’ cities, the essay explores how verticalised
projects, material cities, sci-fi texts, imaginary futures, architectural schemes and urban theories
mingle and resonate together in complex, unpredictable and important ways which do
much to shape contemporary urban landscapes. The third section of the essay explores such
connections through the cases of retro-futuristic urban megaprojects in the Gulf and forests
of towers recently constructed in Shanghai’s Pudong district. The essay’s final discussion
draws on these cases to explore the possibilities that sci-fi imaginaries offer for contesting
the rapid verticalisation of cities around the world.
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...Stephen Graham
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science fiction literature
Lucy Hewitt and Stephen Graham
This paper seeks to intersect two recent trends in urban research. First, it takes seriously the recognition that established traditions of research concerned with urban space have tended to privilege the horizontal extension of cities to the neglect of their vertical or volumetric extension. Second, the paper contributes to the resurgence of interest among social scientists in the validity of fiction – and especially speculative or science fiction – as a source of critical commentary and as a mode of knowledge that can exist in close reciprocity with non-fictional work. From these two starting points the paper develops a reading of the dialogue between the representations of vertical urban life that have featured in landmark works of 20th-century science fiction literature and key themes in contemporary urban analysis.
Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham Stephen Graham
A presentation outlining some of the themes to my new book, 'Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers' (Verso, 2016).
"A revolutionary reimagining of the cities we live in, the air above us, and what goes on in the earth beneath our feet
Today we live in a world that can no longer be read as a two-dimensional map, but must now be understood as a series of vertical strata that reach from the satellites that encircle our planet to the tunnels deep within the ground. In Vertical, Stephen Graham rewrites the city at every level: how the geography of inequality, politics, and identity is determined in terms of above and below.
Starting at the edge of earth’s atmosphere and, in a series of riveting studies, descending through each layer, Graham explores the world of drones, the city from the viewpoint of an aerial bomber, the design of sidewalks and the hidden depths of underground bunkers. He asks: why was Dubai built to be seen from Google Earth? How do the super-rich in São Paulo live in their penthouses far above the street? Why do London billionaires build vast subterranean basements? And how do the technology of elevators and subversive urban explorers shape life on the surface and subsurface of the earth?
Vertical will make you look at the world around you anew: this is a revolution in understanding your place in the world."
See https://www.versobooks.com/books/2237-vertical
Super-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the ElevatorsStephen Graham
Entire libraries can be filled with volumes exploring the cultures, politics and geographies
of the largely horizontal mobilities and transportation infrastructures that are
intrinsic to urban modernity (highways, railways, subways, public transit and so on).
And yet the recent ‘mobilities turn’ has almost completely neglected the cultural
geographies and politics of vertical transportation within and between the buildings of
vertically-structured cityscapes. Attempting to rectify this neglect, this article seeks,
first, to bring elevator travel centrally into discussions about the cultural politics of
urban space and, second, to connect elevator urbanism to the even more neglected
worlds of elevator-based descent in ultra-deep mining. The article addresses, in turn:
the historical emergence of elevator urbanism; the cultural significance of the elevator
as spectacle; the global ‘race’ in elevator speed; shifts towards the ‘splintering’ of
elevator experiences; experiments with new mobility systems which blend elevators
and automobiles; problems of vertical abandonment; and, finally, the neglected vertical
politics of elevator-based ‘ultra-deep’ mining.
Psychology and Architecture in Cities: Phallic ArchitectureUlaş Başar Gezgin
Psychology and Architecture in Cities:
Phallic Architecture, Urban Quality of Life, Environmental Psychology and Social Engineering
Abstract
The urban links between psychology and architecture is closer than it looks at first glance: A somehow marginalized literature focuses on the notion of ‘phallic architecture’ which is loosely conceptualized as the urban high rises that were intentionally or unintentionally built to symbolize phallus. While global examples of intentional phallic architecture usually serves as touristic attractions, psychology as a discipline rarely focused on unintentional phallic architecture. Given the scarcity of comprehensive works on this topic, this paper tries to develop some psychologically-grounded arguments based on a few relevant sources.
Secondly, the paper reviews discussions about urban quality of life and the notion of ‘skyscraped city’ from a psychological perspective, together with spatial segregation not only on class lines or ethnic lines, but also on the distinction between advantaged vs. disadvantaged urban residents including social capital relations.
Thirdly, the paper connects the area of environmental psychology with the participatory approaches in the field of urban planning to extend beyond a critique of existing order by detailing a ‘planning for people, by people and with people’ framework. As stated in Gezgin (2011), environmental psychology revolves on research about the following: “Psychological effects of urban policies; place attachment and place identity; perceptions of city image and urban design; pro-environmental behavior, transportation choices, urban navigation and commuting issues; urban noise, recycling behavior, energy-related behaviors, green identities; and perceptions, attitudes and information on green issues such climate change, global warming, sustainability, conservation, biodiversity, and mitigation measures.”
Finally, as the backdrop to all these topics covered in the paper, the debates on social engineering are on the spot, since the paper conceptualizes psychology and architecture as two subareas of social engineering, following a holistic analysis of ‘authority’. The paper plans to reverse-engineer psychology and architecture in this context.
Keywords: Architecture, psychology, environmental psychology, participatory planning, and social engineering.
Interview sur Capitaine Commerce du site Prospecton.com.
ProspectON est un réseau social dédié aux entreprises :
Son but est de proposer une multitude de services permettant de promouvoir et de développer l'activité commerciale des entrepreneurs.
Aujourd’hui, la présence d’une entreprise sur les Réseaux Sociaux est devenue incontournable.
Y être présent vous permet de :
- développer votre notoriété
- créer la confiance avec votre communauté
- mettre en avant votre expertise
- augmenter le trafic de votre site Web
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science...Stephen Graham
Vertical cities: Representations of urban verticality in 20th-century science fiction literature
Lucy Hewitt and Stephen Graham
This paper seeks to intersect two recent trends in urban research. First, it takes seriously the recognition that established traditions of research concerned with urban space have tended to privilege the horizontal extension of cities to the neglect of their vertical or volumetric extension. Second, the paper contributes to the resurgence of interest among social scientists in the validity of fiction – and especially speculative or science fiction – as a source of critical commentary and as a mode of knowledge that can exist in close reciprocity with non-fictional work. From these two starting points the paper develops a reading of the dialogue between the representations of vertical urban life that have featured in landmark works of 20th-century science fiction literature and key themes in contemporary urban analysis.
Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers Stephen Graham Stephen Graham
A presentation outlining some of the themes to my new book, 'Vertical: The City From Satellites to Bunkers' (Verso, 2016).
"A revolutionary reimagining of the cities we live in, the air above us, and what goes on in the earth beneath our feet
Today we live in a world that can no longer be read as a two-dimensional map, but must now be understood as a series of vertical strata that reach from the satellites that encircle our planet to the tunnels deep within the ground. In Vertical, Stephen Graham rewrites the city at every level: how the geography of inequality, politics, and identity is determined in terms of above and below.
Starting at the edge of earth’s atmosphere and, in a series of riveting studies, descending through each layer, Graham explores the world of drones, the city from the viewpoint of an aerial bomber, the design of sidewalks and the hidden depths of underground bunkers. He asks: why was Dubai built to be seen from Google Earth? How do the super-rich in São Paulo live in their penthouses far above the street? Why do London billionaires build vast subterranean basements? And how do the technology of elevators and subversive urban explorers shape life on the surface and subsurface of the earth?
Vertical will make you look at the world around you anew: this is a revolution in understanding your place in the world."
See https://www.versobooks.com/books/2237-vertical
Super-tall and ultra-deep: The Politics of the ElevatorsStephen Graham
Entire libraries can be filled with volumes exploring the cultures, politics and geographies
of the largely horizontal mobilities and transportation infrastructures that are
intrinsic to urban modernity (highways, railways, subways, public transit and so on).
And yet the recent ‘mobilities turn’ has almost completely neglected the cultural
geographies and politics of vertical transportation within and between the buildings of
vertically-structured cityscapes. Attempting to rectify this neglect, this article seeks,
first, to bring elevator travel centrally into discussions about the cultural politics of
urban space and, second, to connect elevator urbanism to the even more neglected
worlds of elevator-based descent in ultra-deep mining. The article addresses, in turn:
the historical emergence of elevator urbanism; the cultural significance of the elevator
as spectacle; the global ‘race’ in elevator speed; shifts towards the ‘splintering’ of
elevator experiences; experiments with new mobility systems which blend elevators
and automobiles; problems of vertical abandonment; and, finally, the neglected vertical
politics of elevator-based ‘ultra-deep’ mining.
Psychology and Architecture in Cities: Phallic ArchitectureUlaş Başar Gezgin
Psychology and Architecture in Cities:
Phallic Architecture, Urban Quality of Life, Environmental Psychology and Social Engineering
Abstract
The urban links between psychology and architecture is closer than it looks at first glance: A somehow marginalized literature focuses on the notion of ‘phallic architecture’ which is loosely conceptualized as the urban high rises that were intentionally or unintentionally built to symbolize phallus. While global examples of intentional phallic architecture usually serves as touristic attractions, psychology as a discipline rarely focused on unintentional phallic architecture. Given the scarcity of comprehensive works on this topic, this paper tries to develop some psychologically-grounded arguments based on a few relevant sources.
Secondly, the paper reviews discussions about urban quality of life and the notion of ‘skyscraped city’ from a psychological perspective, together with spatial segregation not only on class lines or ethnic lines, but also on the distinction between advantaged vs. disadvantaged urban residents including social capital relations.
Thirdly, the paper connects the area of environmental psychology with the participatory approaches in the field of urban planning to extend beyond a critique of existing order by detailing a ‘planning for people, by people and with people’ framework. As stated in Gezgin (2011), environmental psychology revolves on research about the following: “Psychological effects of urban policies; place attachment and place identity; perceptions of city image and urban design; pro-environmental behavior, transportation choices, urban navigation and commuting issues; urban noise, recycling behavior, energy-related behaviors, green identities; and perceptions, attitudes and information on green issues such climate change, global warming, sustainability, conservation, biodiversity, and mitigation measures.”
Finally, as the backdrop to all these topics covered in the paper, the debates on social engineering are on the spot, since the paper conceptualizes psychology and architecture as two subareas of social engineering, following a holistic analysis of ‘authority’. The paper plans to reverse-engineer psychology and architecture in this context.
Keywords: Architecture, psychology, environmental psychology, participatory planning, and social engineering.
Interview sur Capitaine Commerce du site Prospecton.com.
ProspectON est un réseau social dédié aux entreprises :
Son but est de proposer une multitude de services permettant de promouvoir et de développer l'activité commerciale des entrepreneurs.
Aujourd’hui, la présence d’une entreprise sur les Réseaux Sociaux est devenue incontournable.
Y être présent vous permet de :
- développer votre notoriété
- créer la confiance avec votre communauté
- mettre en avant votre expertise
- augmenter le trafic de votre site Web
Formation documentaire pour étudiants en maîtrise en danse de l'UQÀM.
Processus de recherche documentaire : 6 étapes
Informations sur la recherche documentaire : recherche bibliographique et recherche sujet.
Outils de recherche : Google, catalogue de bibliothèque et bases de données.
Similaire à Dess2213 aut2013_formation documentaire (20)
1. Résumé du contenu de notre formation lors du Séminaire d'intégration.
2. http://www.bibliotheques.uqam.ca/centrale/personnel
3. www.bibliotheques.uqam.ca
4. Ce qu’on cherche quand on cherche dans le Virtuose TOUT
5. http://www.infosphere.uqam.ca/
6. http://www.infosphere.uqam.ca/preparer-sa-recherche/choisir-son-sujet
http://www.infosphere.uqam.ca/preparer-sa-recherche/cerner-son-sujet
7. http://www.infosphere.uqam.ca/rechercher-linformation/etablir-sa-strategie-recherche
8. Les opérateurs Booléens: http://www.infosphere.uqam.ca/rechercher-linformation/etablir-sa-strategie-recherche
9. comment lire une cote : http://www.infosphere.uqam.ca/rechercher-linformation/chercher-virtuose/trouver-un-document-les-rayons
10. Grille complète disponible :
http://www.infosphere.uqam.ca/analyser-linformation/evaluer-un-article-revue/les-revues-en-revue
11. Trouver votre guide thématique : http://guides.bibliotheques.uqam.ca/themes
http://guides.bibliotheques.uqam.ca/themes/63-Finance
http://guides.bibliotheques.uqam.ca/themes/65-Management
3. PLAN
Outils
Recherche documentaire : 4 étapes
• Préparer sa recherche
• Types de documents
• Chercher les documents
• Citer les documents trouvés
Accéder aux ressources électroniques
4. OUTILS votre palette
Craig, James. 1987. Thirty centuries of graphic design.
An illustrated survey. New York: Watson-Guptill, 223p.
5. OUTILS votre palette
Craig, James. 1987. Thirty centuries of graphic design.
An illustrated survey. New York: Watson-Guptill, 223p.
AUTEUR TITRE
EDITEUR
6. design ET graphique = restreindre
design OU affiche = élargir
design SAUF typographie = exclure
OUTILS opérateurs
ET - OU - SAUF
(AND OR NOT)
15. Quels enjeux politiques sous-tendent l’affiche “Battez les Blancs
avec le coin rouge” d’El Lissitzky?
16. Préparer sa recherche : LA GRILLE
Affiche El Lissitsky
Affiche politique El Lissitsky
Poster politique Constructivisme
Affiche russe Constructivism
Affiche révolutionnaire
Political poster
ET
OU
17. 1. Préparer sa recherche
2. Types de documents
3. Chercher les documents
4. Citer les documents trouvés
Recherche documentaire : 4 étapes
18. 1. Préparer sa recherche
2. Types de documents
3. Chercher les documents
4. Citer les documents trouvés
Recherche documentaire : 4 étapes
19. Monographie
Périodiques
Ouvrage de référence
Livres + Catalogue
Magazine / revue
Dictionnaire / encyclopédie
Articles de magazine / revue
Articles de journal
Type supplémentaire
Articles de périodique
Article de journal
Acte de colloque
Type supplémentaire Mémoire et thèse
TYPES DE DOCUMENTS
=
=
=
VIRTUOSE
B.DONÉES
ARCHIPEL
20. 1. Préparer sa recherche
2. Types de documents
3. Chercher les documents
4. Citer les documents trouvés
Recherche documentaire : 4 étapes
21. 1. Préparer sa recherche
2. Types de documents
3. Chercher les documents
4. Citer les documents trouvés
Recherche documentaire : 4 étapes
23. Craig, James. 1987. Thirty centuries of graphic design.
An illustrated survey. New York : Watson-Guptill, 223p.
AUTEUR TITRE
EDITEUR
CHERCHER LES DOCUMENTS : LIVRE
24. CHERCHER LES DOCUMENTS : LIVRE
INDISPONIBLE dans virtuose
Heller, Stephen & Georgette Balance. 2001. Graphic
design history. New York : Allworth Press, 341p.
Disponible à la bibliothèque
d’Aménagement (UdeM) !
bib.umontreal.ca
library.concordia.ca
mcgill.ca/library
25. Forgacs, Éva. 1999-2000. “Malevich, Lissitzky, and the
culture of the future”. Structurist, issue 39-40, pp.50-57.
AUTEUR TITRE de
L’ARTICLE
TITRE dU
PÉRIODIQUE
CHERCHER LES DOCUMENTS : ARTICLE
LIVRAISON
27. CHERCHER LES DOCUMENTS : B.DONÉES
bibliotheques.uqam.ca
Bases de données A-Z
Onglet : PAR TITRE Onglet : PAR CATÉGORIE
A : Art Full Text
E : Encyclopédie Universalis
Érudit
Euréka
O : Oxford art online
R : Repère
CATÉGORIE : Design
Bases Incontournables
+ Envoi
DAAI : Design and applied
art Index
28. 1. Préparer sa recherche
2. Types de documents
3. Chercher les documents
4. Citer les documents trouvés
Recherche documentaire : 4 étapes
29. 1. Préparer sa recherche
2. Types de documents
3. Chercher les documents
4. Citer les documents trouvés
Recherche documentaire : 4 étapes
YAY
presque
fini !
31. Accéder aux ressources électroniques
PROXY
bibliotheques.uqam.ca -- Services à distance -- Accéder aux
ressources électroniques -- Configuration
32. Un Résumé : YAY, lA fin!
3s
Point de départ :
la référence
Construire avec
ET - OU - SAUF
Le catalogue est
votre ami
SU J ET
SYNONYMES
STRATÉGIE
C i tat i o n
INFO
SPHÈRE
GUIDES
33. obtenir de l’aide
Bibliothèque des arts : A-1215
514.987.3000 poste 6262
flannery.adele@uqam.ca
pinterest.com/adeleflannery/
Magnifying Glass designed by Maurizio Pedrazzoli ; Wrench designed by Tom Walsh ; Stopwatch
designed by Ilsur Aptukov ; House designed by Chris Robinson ; Swiss Army Knife designed by
MaxineVSG ; Globe designed by Christoffer Skogsmo via The Noun Project