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[ecrea] New book: Transnational Protests and the Media
Fri Aug 05 20:56:02 GMT 2011
*Cottle, S and Lester, L. (eds.) /Transnational Protests and the Media,
/Peter Lang.*
ISBN 978-1-4331-0985-0 pb. ISBN 978-1-4331-0986-7 hb Order online:
www.peterlang.com**
*/Transnational Protests and the Media/*/ /examines and theorizes the
changing nature of transnational protests and their transactions within
and through contemporary communications and media worldwide. With
contributions from leading theorists and researchers working in the
field today, this cutting-edge collection explores transnational
protests focusing on war and peace, economy and trade, ecology and
climate change and political struggles for civil and human rights --
including the Arab uprisings of 2011. At its core is the concerted
attempt to better understand the increasingly innovative uses of media
and communications by protesters and activists within a rapidly changing
media environment and how this is altering relations of communication
power from the local to the global.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Part One: Transnational Protests: Approaches and Agendas
Chapter 1: Transnational Protests and the Media: An Introduction - Simon
Cottle and Libby Lester
Chapter 2: Transnational Protests and the Media: New Departures and
Challenging Debates - Simon Cottle
*Part Two: Protesting War and Peace*
Chapter 3: Scales of Activism: New Media and Transnational Connections
in Anti- War Movements - Jenny Pickerill, Kevin Gillan and Frank Webster
Chapter 4: '''Not in Our Name": British Press, the Anti-war Movement and
the Iraq Crisis 2002-2009 - Craig Murray, Piers Robinson, Peter Goddard
and Katy Parry
Chapter 5: On Anti-Iraq War Protests and the Global News Sphere -
Stephen Reese
* *
*Part Three: Protesting Economy and Trade*
Chapter 6: Leaderless Crowds, Self-Organizing Publics, and Virtual
Masses: The New Media Politics of Dissent -Andrew Rojecki
Chapter 7: Mediating and Embodying Transnational Protest: Internal and
External Effects of Mass Global Justice Actions - Jeffrey Juris
Chapter 8: Protest and Public Relations: A New Era for Non-institutional
Sources? -- Adam Bowers
Chapter 9: Photography, the Police and Protest: Images of the G20,
London 2009' - David Archibald
*Part Four: Protesting Ecology and Climate*
Chapter 10: Wild Public Screens and Image Events from Seattle to China:
Using Social Media to Broadcast Activism - Kevin DeLuca, Ye Sun and
Jennifer Peeples
Chapter 11: Politics, Power and Online Protest in an Age of
Environmental Conflict' - Brett Hutchins and Libby Lester
Chapter 12: Amazon Struggles in the Global Media Age - Conny Davidson
Chapter 13: Piracy Up-Linked: Sea Shepherd and the Spectacle of Protest
on the High Seas - David Crouch and Katarina Damjanov
Chapter 15: Climate Change and International Protest at Copenhagen:
Reflections on British Television and the Web - Neil T. Gavin and Tom
Marshall
*Part Five: Protesting Human Rights and Civil Rights
*
Chapter 16: Open Source Protest: Human Rights, Online Activism and the
Beijing 2008 Olympic Games - Ana Adi and Andy Miah
Chapter 17: The 2008 Tibet Riots: Competing Perspectives, Divided Group
Protests and Divergent Media Narratives - Chen Li and Lucy Montgomery
Chapter 18: "Resistanbul": An Analysis of Mediated Communication in
Transnational Activism - I.lke S,anl?er Yüksel and Murat Yüksel
Chapter 19: Political Protest and the Persian Blogosphere: The Iranian
Election - Nazanin Ghanavizi
Chapter 20: The Global Human Rights Regime and the Internet:
Non-democratic States and the Hypervisibility of Evidence of Oppression
- Scott Davidson and James Stanyer
*Part Six: Transnational Protests and the Media: Toward Global Civil
**Society? *
Chapter 21: Transnational Protests and the Media: Toward Global Civil
Society? - Libby Lester and Simon Cottle
Afterword: Media and the Arab Uprisings 2011 - Simon Cottle
*Reviews:*
Protest movements are key actors in twenty-first century global
politics. How they use media, old and new, and how media treat them, are
key questions for everyone who wants to understand protest. This
authoritative collection, with impressive coverage of a wide range of
issues and regions, is the best place to examine these issues today.
(Martin Shaw, Research Professor of International Relations, University
of Sussex)
As the impact of the internet on the management of political power and
authority [...], becomes evermore apparent, this study of the
relationship between digital technology and transnational protest
provides a wealth of new material for study. Up to date, and global in
its scope, this collection adds empirical substance to the intensifying
theoretical debate on the impact of the internet on power, protest and
political action. A must-read for students of political media in a
globalised world. (Brian McNair Professor of Journalism, Media &
Communication, Queensland University of Technology)
An important book that advances our understanding of transnational
protests. Students of political communication, digital media and social
movements will be interested in new thinking from these authors about
protest scale, virtual publics, the interactions of digital and mass
media, and the role of images in protest narratives, among other topics.
This is a first-rate collection that develops new theory and offers a
rich set of cases. (Lance Bennett, Professor of Political Science and
Ruddick C. Lawrence Professor of Communication, University of
Washington, Seattle)
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