Preface 1. Who Were the New Media People and Why Did They Believe? 2. Making and Selling a New Media District 3. Capital and Credibility: Hooking up With Wall Street 4. Taking New York Into a New Economy 5. Over the River and Through the Hoods 6. Silicon Alley Unplugged 7. Creativity Unbound (and Reframed?) Notes Index
Michael Indergaard is Associate Professor of Sociology at St. John's University in Jamaica, NY.
"Highly recommended." -- Library Journal
"Mr. Indergaard has some useful things to say about what can be
rescued from the glory days of Silicon Alley. He points out that
real estate innovations during that period, particularly in the
Flatiron District, could be appropriated for the rebuilding of
lower Manhattan, specifically in regards to office space and the
"open flow of capital." But his strongest argument is that the most
important change during the period was in the culture of young
people." -- The New York Sun
"Mr. Indergaard has some useful things to say about what can be
rescued from the glory days of Silicon Alley. He points out that
real estate innovations during the period, particularly in the
Flatiron District, could be appropriated for the rebuildings of
lower Manhattan, specifically in regards to office space and the
"open flow of capital." But his strongest argument is that the most
important change during the period was in the culture of young
people." -- New york Sun
"Editorial Abstract
." -- Reference and research Book News
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