'Pop-up' is a fully-fledged, new urbanism. Celebrated as a flexible and
exciting new form of place making, pop-up culture includes temporary or
nomadic sites such as cinemas, container malls, supper clubs, even
pop-up housing and is now ubiquitous in cities across the world. But
what are the stakes of the 'pop-up' city?
Traversing a wealth of fascinating case studies, Rebranding Precarity
shows how pop-up works to rebrand insecurity and encourages us to
embrace precarity as the new normal. Revealing how urban crisis has
particular temporal and spatial characteristics, defined by uncertainty,
instability, fractures and gaps, it illuminates how those markers of
crisis have been optimistically reimagined over the last few years,
through an examination of seven logics that rebrand insecurity including
within housing, labour economies and gentrifying areas. In doing so, it
paints a frightening picture of how crisis conditions have become not
just accepted, but are in fact desired, in today's metropolis.