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Memes work as rhetorical weapons and discursive arguments in
political conflicts. Across digital platforms, they confirm,
contest and challenge political power and hierarchies. They
simultaneously create social distortion, hostility, and a sense of
community. Memes thus not only reflect norms but also work as a
tool for negotiating them. At the same time, memes meld symbolic
and cultural elements with technological functionalities, allowing
for replicability and remixing. This book studies how memes disrupt
and reimagine politics in humorous ways. Memes create a playful
activity that follows a shared set of rules and gives a (shared)
voice, which may generate togetherness and political identities but
also increase polarization. As their template travels, memes
continue to appropriate new political contexts and to (re)negotiate
frontiers in the political. The chapters in this book allow us to
chart the playful politics of memes and how they establish or push
frontiers in various political, cultural, and platform-specific
contexts. Taken together, memes can challenge and regenerate
populism, carve out spaces for new identity formations, and create
togetherness in situations of crises. They can also, however, lead
to the normalization of racist discourses. This book will be of
interest to researchers and advanced students of Media and
Communication Studies, Information Studies, Politics, Sociology,
and Cultural Studies. It was originally published as a special
issue of the journal, Information, Communication & Society.
Brings together internationally renowned scholars in the field to
address the role of user images and social media in relation to
urgent subjects such as, race, gender, censorship and fake news.
Connects perspectives from different global conflicts, with case
studies from the Middle East, Europe, Asia, Oceania, Africa, and
North America. The collected essays present and develop innovative
visual methodologies as well as theories concerning genres of
networked images, visual politics and embodiness.
Building on the vast research conducted on war and media since the
1970s, scholars are now studying the digital transformation of the
production of news. Little scholarly attention has been paid,
however, to non-professional, eyewitness visuals, even though this
genre holds a still greater bearing on the way conflicts are
fought, communicated, and covered by the news media. This volume
examines the power of new technologies for creating and
disseminating images in relation to conflicts. Mortensen presents a
theoretical framework and uses case studies to investigate the
impact of non-professional images with regard to essential issues
in today's media landscape: including new media technologies and
democratic change, the political mobilization and censorship of
images, the ethics of spectatorship, and the shifting role of the
mainstream news media in the digital age.
This book engages with the mediatized dynamics of political,
military and cultural conflicts. In today's global and converging
media environment, the interrelationship between media and conflict
has been altered and intensified. No longer limited to the realms
of journalism and political communication, various forms of new
media have allowed other social actors to communicate and act
through media networks. Thus, the media not only play an important
role by reporting conflicts; they have also become co-constitutive
of the ways conflicts develop and spread. The first part of the
book, Transnational Networks, addresses the opportunities and
challenges posed by transnational media to actors seeking to engage
in and manage conflicts through new media platforms. The second
part, Mobilising the Personal: Crossing Public and Private
Boundaries, concerns the ways in which media framings of conflicts
often revolve around personal aspects of public figures. The third
part, Military, War, and Media, engages with a classic theme of
media studies - the power relationship between media, state, and
military - but in light of the mediatized condition of modern
warfare, in which the media have become an integrated part of
military strategies. The book develops new theoretical arguments
and a series of empirical studies that are essential reading for
students and scholars interested in the complex roles of media in
contemporary conflicts.
Brings together internationally renowned scholars in the field to
address the role of user images and social media in relation to
urgent subjects such as, race, gender, censorship and fake news.
Connects perspectives from different global conflicts, with case
studies from the Middle East, Europe, Asia, Oceania, Africa, and
North America. The collected essays present and develop innovative
visual methodologies as well as theories concerning genres of
networked images, visual politics and embodiness.
This book engages with the mediatized dynamics of political,
military and cultural conflicts. In today's global and converging
media environment, the interrelationship between media and conflict
has been altered and intensified. No longer limited to the realms
of journalism and political communication, various forms of new
media have allowed other social actors to communicate and act
through media networks. Thus, the media not only play an important
role by reporting conflicts; they have also become co-constitutive
of the ways conflicts develop and spread. The first part of the
book, Transnational Networks, addresses the opportunities and
challenges posed by transnational media to actors seeking to engage
in and manage conflicts through new media platforms. The second
part, Mobilising the Personal: Crossing Public and Private
Boundaries, concerns the ways in which media framings of conflicts
often revolve around personal aspects of public figures. The third
part, Military, War, and Media, engages with a classic theme of
media studies - the power relationship between media, state, and
military - but in light of the mediatized condition of modern
warfare, in which the media have become an integrated part of
military strategies. The book develops new theoretical arguments
and a series of empirical studies that are essential reading for
students and scholars interested in the complex roles of media in
contemporary conflicts.
Building on the vast research conducted on war and media since
the 1970s, scholars are now studying the digital transformation of
the production of news. Little scholarly attention has been paid,
however, to non-professional, eyewitness visuals, even though this
genre holds a still greater bearing on the way conflicts are
fought, communicated, and covered by the news media. This volume
examines the power of new technologies for creating and
disseminating images in relation to conflicts. Mortensen presents a
theoretical framework and uses case studies to investigate the
impact of non-professional images with regard to essential issues
in today s media landscape: including new media technologies and
democratic change, the political mobilization and censorship of
images, the ethics of spectatorship, and the shifting role of the
mainstream news media in the digital age."
Far from being neutral, social media platforms - such as Facebook,
Twitter, YouTube, and WeChat - possess their own material
characteristics, which shape how people engage, protest, resist,
and struggle. This innovative collection advances the notion of
social media materialities to draw attention to the ways in which
the wires and silicon, data streams and algorithms, user and
programming interfaces, business models and terms of service steer
contentious practices and, inversely, how technologies and economic
models are handled and performed by users. The key question is how
the tension between social media's techno-commercial
infrastructures and activist agency plays out in protest.
Addressing this, the volume goes beyond singular empirical examples
and focuses on the characteristics of protest and social media
materialities, offering further conceptualizations and guidance for
this emerging field of research. The various contributions explore
a wide variety of activist projects, protests, and regions, ranging
from Occupy in the USA to environmental protests in China, and from
the Mexican Barrio Nomada to the Copenhagen-based activist
television channel TV Stop (1987-2005).
Far from being neutral, social media platforms - such as Facebook,
Twitter, YouTube, and WeChat - possess their own material
characteristics, which shape how people engage, protest, resist,
and struggle. This innovative collection advances the notion of
social media materialities to draw attention to the ways in which
the wires and silicon, data streams and algorithms, user and
programming interfaces, business models and terms of service steer
contentious practices and, inversely, how technologies and economic
models are handled and performed by users. The key question is how
the tension between social media's techno-commercial
infrastructures and activist agency plays out in protest.
Addressing this, the volume goes beyond singular empirical examples
and focuses on the characteristics of protest and social media
materialities, offering further conceptualizations and guidance for
this emerging field of research. The various contributions explore
a wide variety of activist projects, protests, and regions, ranging
from Occupy in the USA to environmental protests in China, and from
the Mexican Barrio Nomada to the Copenhagen-based activist
television channel TV Stop (1987-2005).
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