2022
DOI: 10.33055/alphil.03188
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Politiques urbaines de la nuit. Entre cultures festives et nuisances sonores à Genève

Abstract: « Après 10 jours d’hospitalisation, la victime vit avec une balle dans les fesses », titre un quotidien suisse à propos d’une fusillade à la sortie d’une discothèque de Genève. Le tireur est un riverain de l’établissement ; exaspéré par les bruits d’une rixe aux portes du lieu en question, il a sorti son fusil de chasse pour mettre un terme aux nuisances. Espace-temps de la ville où cultures festives et nuisances sonores se trouvent en tension, la nuit est tel un baril de poudre, explosant à chacun des heurts … Show more

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“…Specifically, the urban night gained popularity in French‐speaking scholarly communities during the 2010s, finding a place on the research agendas of a growing cohort of historians (Cabantous, 2009), geographers (Challéat, 2010; Comelli, 2015; Giordano, 2017; Pieroni, 2017), sociologists (Guérin, 2017), scholars of urban studies (Bertin, 2016; Mallet, 2009), anthropologists (Monod Becquelin & Galinier, 2020), philosophers (Foessel, 2017) and social science research collectives (CANDELA, 2017). This multidisciplinary interest emerged out of a nuanced set of investigations exploring contrasting features and issues constituting the geographies of the urban night, such as gender perspectives on nocturnal mobilities (Bernard‐Hohm & Raibaud, 2012; Lieber, 2011), night work (Macarie, 2017; Menoux, 2017), artificial lighting (Giordano & Crozat, 2017), the interplay between tourism and the night (Giordano et al., 2018; Giordano & Ong, 2017) and the gentrification of the urban night (Jeanmougin, 2018).…”
Section: Night‐themed Research In Southwestern Europementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, the urban night gained popularity in French‐speaking scholarly communities during the 2010s, finding a place on the research agendas of a growing cohort of historians (Cabantous, 2009), geographers (Challéat, 2010; Comelli, 2015; Giordano, 2017; Pieroni, 2017), sociologists (Guérin, 2017), scholars of urban studies (Bertin, 2016; Mallet, 2009), anthropologists (Monod Becquelin & Galinier, 2020), philosophers (Foessel, 2017) and social science research collectives (CANDELA, 2017). This multidisciplinary interest emerged out of a nuanced set of investigations exploring contrasting features and issues constituting the geographies of the urban night, such as gender perspectives on nocturnal mobilities (Bernard‐Hohm & Raibaud, 2012; Lieber, 2011), night work (Macarie, 2017; Menoux, 2017), artificial lighting (Giordano & Crozat, 2017), the interplay between tourism and the night (Giordano et al., 2018; Giordano & Ong, 2017) and the gentrification of the urban night (Jeanmougin, 2018).…”
Section: Night‐themed Research In Southwestern Europementioning
confidence: 99%