ABSTRACT

This Handbook offers a comprehensive overview of media geography, focusing on a range of different media viewed through the lenses of human geography and media theory. It addresses the spatial practices and processes associated with both old and new media, considering "media" not just as technologies and infrastructures, but also as networks, systems and assemblages of things that come together to enable communication in the real world.

With contributions from academics specializing in geography and media studies, the Routledge Handbook of Media Geographies summarizes the recent developments in the field and explores key questions and challenges affecting various groups, such as women, minorities, and persons with visual impairment. It considers geographical aspects of disruptive media uses such as hacking, fake news, and racism. Written in an approachable style, chapters consider geographies of users, norms, rules, laws, values, attitudes, routines, customs, markets, and power relations. They shed light on how mobile media make users vulnerable to tracking and surveillance but also facilitate innovative forms of mobility, space perception and placemaking. Structured in four distinct sections centered around "control and access to digital media," "mass media," "mobile media and surveillance" and "media and the politics of knowledge," the Handbook explores digital divides and other manifestations of the uneven geographies of power. It also includes an overview of the alternative social media universe created by the Chinese government.

Media geography is a burgeoning field of study that lies at the intersections of various social sciences, including human geography, political science, sociology, anthropology, communication/media studies, urban studies, and women and gender studies. Academics and students across these fields will greatly benefit from this Handbook.

chapter 1|15 pages

Media geographies

An introduction

part I|75 pages

Control and access to digital media

chapter 2|10 pages

Internet censorship

Shaping the world's access to cyberspace

chapter 3|20 pages

Digital divides

chapter 4|11 pages

Hacking in digital environments

chapter 5|14 pages

The internet media in China

part II|66 pages

Mass media

chapter 7|11 pages

Newspapers

Geographic research approaches and future prospects

chapter 8|12 pages

Fake news

Mapping the social relations of journalism's legitimation crisis

chapter 9|14 pages

Film geography

part III|48 pages

Mobile media and surveillance

chapter 13|11 pages

Moving

Mediated mobility and placemaking

chapter 15|11 pages

Digital surveillance and place

part IV|61 pages

Media and the politics of knowledge

chapter 16|11 pages

Race, ethnicity and the media

Absence, presence and socio-spatial reverberations

chapter 19|11 pages

Sex, gender and media