ABSTRACT

As individuals incorporate new forms of media into their daily routines, these media transform individuals’ engagement with networks of heterogeneous actors. Using the concept of media practices, this volume looks at processes of social and political transformation in diverse regions of the world to argue that media change and social change converge on a redefinition of the relations of individuals to larger collective bodies. To this end, contributors examine new collective actors emerging in the public arena through digital media or established actors adjusting to a diversified communication environment. The book offers an important contribution to a vibrant, transdisciplinary, and international field of research emerging at the intersections of communication, performance and social movement studies.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Media Practices, Social Movements and Performativity: Transdisciplinary Approaches

part I|46 pages

Framing Media Practices

chapter 1|25 pages

From Public Sphere to Performative Publics

Developing Media Practice as an Analytic Model

chapter 2|20 pages

Reframing Modes of Resistance

Performing and Choreographing Protest through Media Practices

part II|129 pages

Approaching Media Practices

chapter 3|24 pages

Mobilising the Homeless?

A Proposal for the Concept of Banal Mobilisation

chapter 4|19 pages

Gezi Uprising

Performative Democracy and Politics of the Body in an Extended Space of Appearance

chapter 5|14 pages

Mobilise, Justify, Accuse

The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood and Changing Media Practices

chapter 6|14 pages

The Mechanics of Signification

Making the Story of Embros

chapter 7|22 pages

“ Narco Culture” and Media Practices

Negotiating Gender Identities in Contexts of Violence

chapter 8|18 pages

Performing Fragmented Realities

Interventionist Media Practice by LIGNA, Rimini Protokoll and plan b

chapter 9|18 pages

Succession or Cessation

The Challenge of New Media for the Japan-Korea Solidarity Movement