Space, Mobility, and Crisis in Mega-Event Organisation: Tokyo Olympics 2020’s Atmospheric Irradiations

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This book advances an alternative critical posthumanist approach to mega-event organisation, taking into account both the new and the old crises which humanity and our planet face. Taking the delayed Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games as a case study, Tzanelli explores mega-event crisis and risk management in the era of extreme urbanisation, natural disasters, global pandemic, and technoscientific control.

Using the atmospheric term ‘irradiation’ (a technology of glamour and transparency, as well as bodily penetration by harmful agents and strong affects), the book explores this epistemological statement diachronically (via Tokyo’s relationship with Western forms of domination) and synchronically (the city as a global cultural-political player but victim of climate catastrophes). It presents how the ‘Olympic enterprise’s’ ‘flattening’ of indigenous environmental place-making rhythms, and the scientisation of space and place in the Anthropocene lead to reductionisms harmful for a viable programme of planetary recovery.

An experimental study of the mega-event is enacted, which considers the researcher’s analytical tools and the styles of human and non-human mobility during the mega-event as reflexive gateways to forms of posthuman flourishing. Crossing and bridging disciplinary boundaries, the book will appeal to any scholar interested in mobilities theory, event and environment studies, sociology of knowledge, and cultural globalisation.

Author(s): Rodanthi Tzanelli
Series: Routledge Advances in Sociology, 349
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 201
City: London

Cover
Endorsement
Half Title
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Figures
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Chapter 1 Introducing a Risky Experiment
Serendipitous Events
Adjusting the New Mobilities Paradigm
Critical Atmospheric Mobilities and the Olympic Project
The Structure of the Book
Chapter 2 Pilgrimage in Tokyo
Tokyo as a Cosmion: ‘Tracing’ Affective Mobilities
Archipelago Imaginaries of (Im)mobility
Space, Power Chrononormativity, and the Olympic Project
Chapter 3 The Birth of the Japanese CineKiki
Risk Assessment in Aleph
Entanglements of Spirit/matter (Or, a Genealogy of Japanese Risk)
Irradiation: Kiki as an Atmosphere
Chapter 4 The Dreams of the Japanese CineKiki
Dream Monitoring
Ancestral Roots and Economic Networks
Chapter 5 The Ceremonies of the Japanese CineKiki
Emakimono Planetarianism Redux
Host Selfie as Blueprint Utopianism: On to France 2024
Chapter 6 The Life and Death of the Japanese CineKiki
Resolving Aimai: Mobility and Mortality
Virulent Fields: Volumetric Poetics and Amplified Sounds/noises
Chapter 7 The Journeys of the Japanese CineKiki: Bodies and No-Bodies
Beyond Utopianism
Style 1 – Homegenising
Style 2 – Foraging
Chapter 8 Conclusion: The Chronicles of a Biotechnical Crime
Bibliography
Index