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Selling city livingUrban branding campaigns, class power and the civic goodGeorge Mason University, USA, tgibson1{at}gmu.edu This article examines the process through which urban leaders brand their cities to appeal to target markets of affluent suburbanites. Drawing on a case analysis of Washington, DCs recent effort to attract new residents, this article follows the districts city living, dc style campaign through three key moments in its circulation: the moments of production, text and context. In doing so, the article explores the historical motives, the political economic limits and the social consequences of such efforts to reposition the urban brand. A concluding section discusses how this case study reveals an important, but as yet underdeveloped, point of contact between political-economic and cultural-semiotic approaches to critical media studies.
Key Words: cultural studies gentrification political economy
International Journal of Cultural Studies, Vol. 8, No. 3,
259-280 (2005) This article has been cited by other articles:
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