ABSTRACT
A few months into the popular uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region in 2009/10, the promises of social media, including its ability to influence a participatory governance model, grassroots civic engagement, new social dynamics, inclusive societies and new opportunities for businesses and entrepreneurs, became more evident than ever. Simultaneously, cartography received new considerable interest as it merged with social media platforms. In an attempt to rearticulate the relationship between media and mapping practices, whilst also addressing new and social media, this interdisciplinary book abides by one relatively clear point: space is a media product. The overall focus of this book is accordingly not so much on the role of new technologies and social networks as it is on how media and mapping practices expand the very notion of cultural engagement, political activism, popular protest and social participation.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|92 pages
Cartographies
chapter 1|18 pages
Mapping Empire
chapter 2|26 pages
Who Maps Middle Eastern Geographies in the Digital Age? Inequalities in Web 2.0 Cartographies in Israel/Palestine
chapter 3|24 pages
Taking the Battle to Cyberspace
chapter 4|22 pages
Wargaming the Middle East
part II|106 pages
Movements
chapter 5|20 pages
Iranian Internet Cinema, a Cinema of Embodied Protest
chapter 6|20 pages
From Amateur Video to New Documentary Formats
chapter 7|16 pages
Cinematic Spaces of ‘the Arab Street'
chapter 9|22 pages
Mediated Narratives of Syrian Refugees
part III|96 pages
Agencies
