Beyond the Protest Square: Digital Media and Augmented Dissent
Autor Tetyana Lokoten Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 mar 2021
The book provides a nuanced contribution to debates about the role of digital media in contentious politics and protest events, both in Eastern Europe and beyond.
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| Bloomsbury Publishing – 15 mar 2023 | 209.27 lei 6-8 săpt. | |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781786605962
ISBN-10: 1786605961
Pagini: 160
Ilustrații: 10 b/w photos; 2 tables;
Dimensiuni: 161 x 228 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1786605961
Pagini: 160
Ilustrații: 10 b/w photos; 2 tables;
Dimensiuni: 161 x 228 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Digital Media and Society in Ukraine and Russia
Chapter 3. Euromaidan Protesters: A Snapshot
Chapter 4. Space, Distance and Digital Media
Chapter 5. Socially Mediated Visibility and Protest Witnessing
Chapter 6. Protest Organising and Networked Communities
Chapter 7. Information Sharing and Protest Frames
Chapter 8. Russia: Protest in the Age of Networked Authoritarianism
Chapter 9. Conclusion: Beyond the Protest Square
References
Index
Endnotes
Chapter 2. Digital Media and Society in Ukraine and Russia
Chapter 3. Euromaidan Protesters: A Snapshot
Chapter 4. Space, Distance and Digital Media
Chapter 5. Socially Mediated Visibility and Protest Witnessing
Chapter 6. Protest Organising and Networked Communities
Chapter 7. Information Sharing and Protest Frames
Chapter 8. Russia: Protest in the Age of Networked Authoritarianism
Chapter 9. Conclusion: Beyond the Protest Square
References
Index
Endnotes
Recenzii
Lokot's work is an invaluable contribution to its field, providing historical and contemporary perspectives on the subjects of dissent, protest and media. Beyond the Protest Square will be of great interest to people studying various social movements in the post-Soviet space and the shifting relations between digital media and dissent.
Based on her research on the 2013-14 Euromaidan protests in Ukraine and the mass rallies against corruption that took place in 2017 in Russia, Lokot writes about the opportunities and limitations of digital technologies for protest movements and emphasizes the close entanglement of offline and online spaces. The book draws on state-of-the-art literature on the social role of digital technology and is academic in style but still a lively read, thanks to the numerous quotes from interviews that Lokot conducted with protesters.
How online protest bleeds into street demonstrations is one of the critical questions of our time. In this path-breaking book, Tetyana Lokot presents a theory of augmented dissent to map and analyze the relationship between digital and physical protest. Through her study of the Euromaidan revolution and Russian street protests, Dr. Lokot demonstrates how to identify and assess key intersections between online calls to action and activity on protest squares. Her research enables a better understanding of both the opportunities and limits of how digitally augmented protests can effectively challenge authoritarian leaders. Beyond the Protest Square informs broader theories about political participation and rights activism online, making it a must-read in the field of political communication, social movements, and beyond.
Tetyana Lokot has a journalist's eye for detail and a scholar's gift for connections as she examines how technology shapes protest and dissent in Ukraine and Russia over the past decade. Lokot's idea of "augmented dissent", in which protest unfolds in a "hybrid reality" of online and offline spaces provides key conceptual tools for understanding dissent that's been transformative to Eastern Europe, though less visible than comparable waves of protest like the Arab Spring. Lokot's deep knowledge of Ukraine and Russia gives case studies in Russia and Ukraine critical context and insight and provides key insights about the power and limitations of dissent online and off.
In this must-read book, Lokot provides us with a highly nuanced and rigorously researched understanding of how activists (and active but ordinary citizens) who engage in acts of protest view and employ digital technologies. Most refreshingly, Lokot's research goes above and beyond the often-fetishized explorations that focus on the singularity of social media and ICTs and instead, this highly readable book provides us with a critical look discerning exactly what social media and ICTs "do" and "do not do" for protest engagement. Conceptually innovative, the focus on augmented dissent helps us understand how and why social media and ICTs augment and enhance contentious activity in the hybrid spaces where material and digital elements of social, political, and economic rights are entangled. Anyone interested in detailed and deliberate research on the role of digital media in contentious politics, be it in Eastern Europe or beyond, will be well served by reading this book.
In Beyond the Protest Square, Lokot gives us more than an authoritative study of how protest has changed the face of Ukrainian and Russian politics. She forces us to come to terms with the inseparability of the network and the street, and thus to understand citizens and protesters as whole human beings. It is a rare achievement, and one that should help redefine the field.
Based on her research on the 2013-14 Euromaidan protests in Ukraine and the mass rallies against corruption that took place in 2017 in Russia, Lokot writes about the opportunities and limitations of digital technologies for protest movements and emphasizes the close entanglement of offline and online spaces. The book draws on state-of-the-art literature on the social role of digital technology and is academic in style but still a lively read, thanks to the numerous quotes from interviews that Lokot conducted with protesters.
How online protest bleeds into street demonstrations is one of the critical questions of our time. In this path-breaking book, Tetyana Lokot presents a theory of augmented dissent to map and analyze the relationship between digital and physical protest. Through her study of the Euromaidan revolution and Russian street protests, Dr. Lokot demonstrates how to identify and assess key intersections between online calls to action and activity on protest squares. Her research enables a better understanding of both the opportunities and limits of how digitally augmented protests can effectively challenge authoritarian leaders. Beyond the Protest Square informs broader theories about political participation and rights activism online, making it a must-read in the field of political communication, social movements, and beyond.
Tetyana Lokot has a journalist's eye for detail and a scholar's gift for connections as she examines how technology shapes protest and dissent in Ukraine and Russia over the past decade. Lokot's idea of "augmented dissent", in which protest unfolds in a "hybrid reality" of online and offline spaces provides key conceptual tools for understanding dissent that's been transformative to Eastern Europe, though less visible than comparable waves of protest like the Arab Spring. Lokot's deep knowledge of Ukraine and Russia gives case studies in Russia and Ukraine critical context and insight and provides key insights about the power and limitations of dissent online and off.
In this must-read book, Lokot provides us with a highly nuanced and rigorously researched understanding of how activists (and active but ordinary citizens) who engage in acts of protest view and employ digital technologies. Most refreshingly, Lokot's research goes above and beyond the often-fetishized explorations that focus on the singularity of social media and ICTs and instead, this highly readable book provides us with a critical look discerning exactly what social media and ICTs "do" and "do not do" for protest engagement. Conceptually innovative, the focus on augmented dissent helps us understand how and why social media and ICTs augment and enhance contentious activity in the hybrid spaces where material and digital elements of social, political, and economic rights are entangled. Anyone interested in detailed and deliberate research on the role of digital media in contentious politics, be it in Eastern Europe or beyond, will be well served by reading this book.
In Beyond the Protest Square, Lokot gives us more than an authoritative study of how protest has changed the face of Ukrainian and Russian politics. She forces us to come to terms with the inseparability of the network and the street, and thus to understand citizens and protesters as whole human beings. It is a rare achievement, and one that should help redefine the field.