LEADER : 00000nam 2200000uu 4500 |
008 190621s2004||||th 000 0 eng d |
020 ^a9780465024773 (pbk.) |
020 ^a0465024777 (pbk.) |
050 0 ^aHD53^b.F653 2004 |
100 1 ^aFlorida, Richard L. |
245 14 ^aThe rise of the creative class :^band how it's transforming work, leisure, community and everyday life /^cRichard Florida. |
300 ^axxx, 434 pages :^billustrations ;^c21 cm |
504 ^aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 383-411) and index. |
505 0 ^a1. The transformation of everyday life -- Part One: TheCreative Age. 2. The creative ethos. 3. The creative economy. 4. The creative class -- Part Two: Work. 5. The machine shop and the hair salon. 6. The horizontal labor market. 7. The no-collar workplace. 8. Managing creativity. 9. The time warp -- Part Three: Life and Leisure. 10. The experiential life. 11. The big morph (a rant) -- Part Four: Community. 12. The power of place. 13.The geography of creativity. 14. Technology, talent and tolerance. 15. From social capital to creative capital. 16. Building the creative community. 17. The creative class grows up. |
520 0 ^aHere, Richard Florida traces the fundamental theme that runs through a host of seemingly unrelated changes in American society: the growing role of creativity in our economy. He describes a society in which the creative ethos is increasingly dominant. |
650 0 ^aCreative ability^xEconomic aspects. |
650 0 ^aCreative ability^xSocial aspects. |
650 0 ^aWork ethic^zUnited States. |
650 0 ^aLeisure^zUnited States. |
650 0 ^aSocial classes^zUnited States. |
650 0 ^aCreative ability in technology. |
650 0 ^aTechnology and civilization. |
650 0 ^aHuman capital. |
651 0 ^aUnited States^xEconomic conditions^y1981-2001. |
651 0 ^aUnited States^xSocial conditions^y1980- |
999 ^aปวีนา ภู่ทอง |