Revaluating urban space through tweets: An analysis of Twitter-based mobile food vendors and online communication

The rise of mobile food vending in US cities combines urban space and mobility with continuous online communication. Unlike traditional urban spaces that are predictable and known, contemporary vendors use information technology to generate impromptu social settings in unconventional and often under...

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Veröffentlicht in:New media & society 2016-09, Vol.18 (8), p.1636-1656
Hauptverfasser: Wessel, Ginette, Ziemkiewicz, Caroline, Sauda, Eric
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The rise of mobile food vending in US cities combines urban space and mobility with continuous online communication. Unlike traditional urban spaces that are predictable and known, contemporary vendors use information technology to generate impromptu social settings in unconventional and often underutilized spaces. This unique condition requires new methods that interpret online communication as a critical component in the production of new forms of public life. We suggest qualitative approaches combined with data-driven analyses are necessary when planning for emergent behavior. In Charlotte, NC, we investigate the daily operations, tweet content, and spatial and temporal sequencing of six vendors over an extended period of time. The study illustrates the interrelationship between data, urban space, and time and finds that a significant proportion of tweet content is used to announce vending locations in a time-based pattern and that the spatial construction of events is often independent of traditional urban form.
ISSN:1461-4448
1461-7315
DOI:10.1177/1461444814567987