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[Commlist] New book: Citizen Media and Practice: Currents, Connections, Challenges
Mon Jan 20 10:35:09 GMT 2020
We are happy to announce the publication of the book CITIZEN
MEDIA AND PRACTICE: CURRENTS, CONNECTIONS, CHALLENGES, edited by
Hilde C. Stephansen (University of Westminster) and Emiliano
Treré (Cardiff University).
Purchase the book here (paperback, hardback and eBook editions
available from Routledge): https://bit.ly/2tkh6kX
Access book abstracts, TOC and download a free PDF version of
Chapter 1:
http://citizenmediaseries.org/published_volumes/citizen-media-and-practice/
The blurb: This groundbreaking collection advances understanding
of the concept of media practices by critically interrogating
its relevance for the study of citizen and activist media. Media
as practice has emerged as a powerful approach to understanding
the media’s significance in contemporary society. Bringing
together contributions from leading scholars in sociology, media
and communication, social movement and critical data studies,
this book stimulates dialogue across previously separate
traditions of research on citizen and activist media practices
and stakes out future directions for research in this burgeoning
interdisciplinary field. Framed by a foreword by Nick Couldry
and a substantial introductory chapter by the editors,
contributions to the volume trace the roots and appropriations
of the concept of media practice in Latin American communication
theory; reflect on the relationship between activist agency and
technological affordances; explore the relevance of the media
practice approach for the study of media activism, including
activism that takes media as its central object of struggle; and
demonstrate the significance of the media practice approach for
understanding processes of mediatization and datafication.
Offering both a comprehensive introduction to scholarship on
citizen media and practice and a cutting-edge exploration of a
novel theoretical framework, the book is ideal for students and
experienced scholars alike.
The book includes contributions by: Nick Couldry, Hilde Stephansen,
Emiliano Treré, Clemencia Rodríguez, Omar Rincón, Amparo Marroquín,
Alejandro Barranquero, Ángel Barbas, Donatella Della Porta, Bart
Cammaerts, Anne Kaun, Dorothy Kidd, Alice Mattoni, Elena Pavan, Andreas
Hepp, Sigrid Kannengießer, Helen Kennedy, Stefania Milan, Aristea
Fotopoulou and Lina Dencik.
Reviews:
“Thinking about and exploring media practices entail the
recognition that we need another kind of gaze, other points of
view, other places from which to make sense of culture and the
media. Citizen Media and Practice provides a renewed
understanding of media practices in connection to the people and
the territories they inhabit. The book explores the ambiguities
of media practices and charts the possibilities they open up to
imagine another kind of world and connect to other ways of
thinking about culture.”
Jesús Martín-Barbero, author of Communication, culture and
hegemony: From the media to mediations (Sage, 1993) (Orig.
edition: De los Medios a las Mediaciones. Comunicación, cultura
y hegemonía, Gustavo Gilli, 1987)
“Citizen Media and Practice is an outstanding contribution to
practice-oriented research on citizen and activist media today.
Its contributions are delicately balanced for stimulating
interdisciplinary cross-fertilisation based on empirical
research into a great diversity of topics related to media
activism and social movements in Europe and Latin America. The
book offers an up-to-date, cutting-edge overview of how practice
approaches are useful for grasping contemporary activism and
media processes, and how materialities, digitalities,
discourses, bodies, affects and emotions are embedded into
political actions that aim to change the world we live in,
through our makings and aspirations, doings and sayings. This
book demonstrates that practice theories are alive and kicking
because they are powerful tools to understand ourselves as
citizens; active agents of the world we inhabit”.
Elisenda Ardèvol, Professor in Social and Cultural Anthropology
at UOC (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya), Barcelona. Director of
the Mediaccions Research Group in Culture and Digital
Communication.
“Stephansen and Treré have brought together a very competent
and interdisciplinary collective of researchers that together
have delivered an inspiring book! It builds necessary bridges
between Anglo-Saxon and Latin American scholarship; it retrieves
relevant and almost forgotten past research, letting it inform
contemporary scholarship: and it establishes connections between
research into citizen media practice with relevant and emerging
fields of inquiry in the social sciences. The result is a very
commendable book that challenges and pushes the boundaries of
not only media scholarship but of social science more broadly.”
Thomas Tufte, Professor at and Director of the Institute for
Media and Creative Industries, Loughborough University London.
Author of Communication and Social Change – A Citizen
Perspective (Polity, 2017)
“There is a terrific immediacy to Citizen Media and Practice.
Reading this book feels like sneaking into an advanced seminar
with leading Latin American and anglophone scholars as they
debate the latest implications of the ‘practice turn’ for the
study of media, communication and social movements.
John Postill, Senior Lecturer in Communication at RMIT
University, Melbourne, author of The Rise of Nerd Politics
(Pluto, 2018)
“This book is a timely and necessary overview of the notion of
“media as practice.” It blends insights from Latin American and
Northern communication scholarship, and takes stock of the
current state of the research. The chapters provide a wealth of
insights to further refine the understanding of “what citizens
(and social movements) do with media”. At a time of growing
concerns about the rise of anti-progressive movements around the
world, this book delivers hope without rose-tinted, unrealistic
promises. Amid the current obsession with data, measurement and
technology, this book reminds us why organized, ordinary
citizens matter in the struggle to challenge power.”
Silvio Waisbord, Professor in the School of Media and Public
Affairs, George Washington University, past Editor-in-Chief,
Journal of Communication (2015-2018), author of Communication: A
Post-Discipline (Polity, 2019).
“From data practices to video activism, this book brings
together the best scholars in the field who explore the stories,
the values and struggles of those working on citizen media. A
must read for anyone interested in these media forms, their
social importance, and their struggle for social justice”.
Veronica Barassi, Senior Lecturer, Media, Communications and
Cultural Studies, Goldsmiths University of London. Author of
Activism on the Web: Everyday Struggles Against Digital
Capitalism (Routledge, 2015
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