ABSTRACT

Citizen Media and Public Spaces presents a pioneering exploration of citizen media as a highly interdisciplinary domain that raises vital political, social and ethical issues relating to conceptions of citizenship and state boundaries, the construction of publics and social imaginaries, processes of co-optation and reverse co-optation, power and resistance, the ethics of witnessing and solidarity, and novel responses to the democratic deficit.

Framed by a substantial introduction by the editors, the twelve contributions to the volume interrogate the concept of citizen media theoretically and empirically, and offer detailed case studies that extend from the UK to Russia and Bulgaria and from China to Denmark and the liminal spaces within which a growing number of refugees now live.

A rich new domain of scholarship and practice emerges out of the studies presented. Citizen media is shown to embrace both physical and digital interventions in public space, as well as the sets of values and agendas that influence and drive the practices and discourses through which individuals and collectives position themselves within and in relation to society and participate in the creation of diverse publics.

This book will be of interest to students and researchers in media and communication studies, particularly those studying citizen media, media and society, journalism and society, and political communication.

Cover image: courtesy of Ruben Hamelink

 

chapter 1|22 pages

Reconceptualizing citizen media

A preliminary charting of a complex domain

part I|53 pages

Empowering citizens

chapter 2|17 pages

Understanding citizen media as practice

Agents, processes, publics

chapter 3|16 pages

Frontiers of the political

‘Closed Sea' and the cinema of discontent

chapter 4|18 pages

Citizen mediations of connectivity

Narrowing the ‘Culture of Distance' in television news

part II|59 pages

Questions of performance and affect

chapter 5|17 pages

Theatricality and gesture as citizen media

Composure on a precipice

chapter 6|22 pages

Nanodemonstrations as media events

Networked forms of the Russian protest movement

chapter 7|18 pages

The politics of affect in activist amateur subtitling

A biopolitical perspective

part III|50 pages

The personal and the political

chapter 9|17 pages

Participatory urbanism

Making the stranger familiar and the familiar strange

part IV|52 pages

Processes of appropriation