ABSTRACT

The Routledge Companion to Media and Activism is a wide-ranging collection of 42 original and authoritative essays by leading contributors from a variety of academic disciplines.

Introducing and exploring central debates about the diverse relationships between both media and protest, and communication and social change, the book offers readers a reliable and informed guide to understanding how media and activism influence one another. The expert contributors examine the tactics and strategies of protest movements, and how activists organize themselves and each other; they investigate the dilemmas of media coverage and the creation of alternative media spaces and platforms; and they emphasize the importance of creativity and art in social change.

Bringing together case studies and contributors from six continents, the collection is organized around themes that address past, present and future developments from around the world. The Routledge Companion to Media and Activism is an essential reference and guide for those who want to understand this vital area.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Making meanings and making trouble

part |58 pages

Themes

chapter |9 pages

Looking back, looking ahead

What has changed in social movement media since the internet and social media?

chapter |8 pages

Nonviolent activism and the media

Gandhi and beyond

chapter |11 pages

Can the Women’s Peace Camp be televised?

Challenging mainstream media coverage of Greenham Common

chapter |8 pages

Artistic activism

chapter |9 pages

Alternative computing

part |77 pages

Organizations and identities

chapter |10 pages

Transformative media organizing

Key lessons from participatory communications research with the immigrant rights, Occupy, and LGBTQ and Two-Spirit movements

chapter |10 pages

Affective publics and windows of opportunity

Social media and the potential for social change

chapter |9 pages

Connective or collective?

The intersection between online crowds and social movements in contemporary activism

chapter |8 pages

Forming publics

Alternative media and activist cultural practices

part |54 pages

Activist arts

chapter |9 pages

Cats, punk, arson and new media

Art activism in Russia 2007–2015

chapter |9 pages

Art as activism in Japan

The case of a good-for-nothing kid and her pussy

chapter |8 pages

Music and activism

From prefigurative to pragmatic politics

chapter |8 pages

Small ‘p’ politics and minor gestures

political artists, politics and aesthetics in contemporary art

chapter |9 pages

I can haz rights?

Online memes as digital embodiment of craft(ivism)

part |63 pages

Tactics of visibility

chapter |9 pages

Affective activism and political secularism

The unending body in the Femen movement

chapter |9 pages

Palestine online

Occupation and liberation in the digital age

chapter |9 pages

Turning murders into public executions

‘Beheading videos’ as alternative media

chapter |9 pages

Counter-cartography

Mapping power as collective practice

part |47 pages

Contesting narratives

chapter |9 pages

The British National Party

Digital discourse and power

chapter |9 pages

The case of the destroyed plaque

Social media, collective memory and activism in Cartagena, Colombia

part |49 pages

Changing the media

chapter |10 pages

Policy activism

Advocating, protesting and hacking media regulation

chapter |8 pages

Media activism

Media change?

chapter |9 pages

Fan activism

chapter |9 pages

Acting out

Resisting copyright monopolies

part |50 pages

Beyond social media

chapter |10 pages

‘Dear Mr. Neo-Nazi, can you please give me your informed consent so that I can quote your fascist tweet?’

Questions of social media research ethics in online ideology critique

chapter |9 pages

Beyond ‘report, block, ignore’

Informal responses to trolling and harassment on social media