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@article{ Jacobs2006,
 title = {A geography of big things},
 author = {Jacobs, Jane M.},
 journal = {Cultural Geographies},
 number = {1},
 pages = {1-27},
 volume = {13},
 year = {2006},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1191/1474474006eu354oa},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-232728},
 abstract = {This paper sketches some conceptual tools by which cultural geographers might advance                geographies of architecture. It does so by thinking specifically about one                architectural form: the modernist residential highrise, which is the ‘big                thing’ of this paper. The paper draws on recent developments in material                semiotics in order to interrogate features often uniquely associated with the                highrise, such as its global reach, uniformity, and scale. The paper first rethinks                how cultural geography has traditionally explained the movement of built forms,                explicitly turning from diffusionist accounts to the notion of translation. It then                offers a reconsideration of the way geographers might think about scale in relation                to a ‘big’ and ‘global’ thing like the                modernist highrise, arguing that scale is produced relationally and in specific                contexts. Finally, it offers a template for cultural geographical scholarship which                takes seriously the technical work entailed in things, like a highrise,                materialising or de-materializing. It does so by way of two illustrative stories:                one about the productive social science of highrise suicides in Singapore; the other                about the destructive role of the inquiry into collapse of Ronan point in the UK.},
}