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El. knyga: Protest Cultures: A Companion

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  • Formatas: 568 pages
  • Serija: Protest, Culture & Society
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Mar-2016
  • Leidėjas: Berghahn Books
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781785331497
  • Formatas: 568 pages
  • Serija: Protest, Culture & Society
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Mar-2016
  • Leidėjas: Berghahn Books
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781785331497

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Protest is a ubiquitous and richly varied social phenomenon, one that finds expression not only in modern social movements and political organizations but also in grassroots initiatives, individual action, and creative works. It constitutes a distinct cultural domain, one whose symbolic content is regularly deployed by media and advertisers, among other actors. Yet within social movement scholarship, such cultural considerations have been comparatively neglected. Protest Cultures: A Companion dramatically expands the analytical perspective on protest beyond its political and sociological aspects. It combines cutting-edge synthetic essays with concise, accessible case studies on a remarkable array of protest cultures, outlining key literature and future lines of inquiry.

Recenzijos

This volume definitely provides an important starting point: It helps explain how different protest movements construct their own reality, use media in novel ways, organize actions across all spheres of public life, and involve various representations, their very own language, as well as different forms of rule breaking. And it repeatedly reminds us how much work there still is to be donehow little we actually know about why and how protest occurs. German Politics and Society

List of Figures
x
List of Tables
xii
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1(12)
Kathrin Fahlenbrach
Martin Klimke
Joachim Scharloth
Part I Perspectives on Protest
Chapter 1 Protest in Social Movements
13(13)
Donatella Della Porta
Chapter 2 Protest Cultures in Social Movements: Dimensions and Functions
26(7)
Dieter Rucht
Chapter 3 Protest in the Research on Sub- and Countercultures
33(15)
Rupa Huq
Chapter 4 Protest as Symbolic Politics
48(17)
Jana Gunther
Chapter 5 Protest and Lifestyle
65(12)
Nick Crossley
Chapter 6 Protest as Artistic Expression
77(17)
TV Reed
Chapter 7 Protest as a Media Phenomenon
94(23)
Kathrin Fahlenbrach
Part II Morphology of Protest: Constructing Reality
Chapter 8 Ideologies/Cognitive Orientation
117(7)
Ruth Kinna
Chapter 9 Frames and Framing Processes
124(6)
David A. Snow
Chapter 10 Cultural Memory
130(7)
Lorena Anton
Chapter 11 Narratives
137(9)
Jakob Tanner
Chapter 12 Utopia
146(7)
Laurence Davis
Chapter 13 Identity
153(7)
Natalia Ruiz-Junco
Scott Hunt
Chapter 14 Emotion
160(6)
Deborah B. Gould
Chapter 15 Commitment
166(7)
Catherine Corrigall-Brown
Part III Morphology of Protest: Media
Chapter 16 Body
173(8)
Andrea Pabst
Chapter 17 Dance as Protest
181(9)
Eva Aymami Rene
Chapter 18 Violence/Militancy
190(8)
Lorenzo Bosi
Chapter 19 The Role of Humor in Protest Cultures
198(7)
Marjoleint Hart
Chapter 20 Fashion in Social Movements
205(8)
Nicole Doerr
Chapter 21 Action's Design
213(8)
Tali Hatuka
Chapter 22 Alternative Media
221(7)
Alice Mattoni
Chapter 23 Graffiti
228(5)
Johannes Stahl
Chapter 24 Posters and Placards
233(10)
Sascha Demarmels
Chapter 25 Images and Imagery of Protest
243(16)
Kathrin Fahlenbrach
Chapter 26 Typography and Text Design
259(5)
Jurgen Spitzmuller
Chapter 27 Political Music and Protest Song
264(11)
Beate Kutschke
Part IV Morphology of Protest: Domains of Protest Actions
Chapter 28 The Public Sphere
275(9)
Simon Teune
Chapter 29 Public Space
284(10)
Tali Hatuka
Chapter 30 Everyday Life
294(9)
Anna Schober
Chapter 31 Cyberspace
303(14)
Paul G. Nixon
Rajash Rawal
Part V Morphology of Protest: Re-Presentation of Protest
Chapter 32 Witness and Testimony
317(9)
Eric G. Waggoner
Chapter 33 Media Coverage
326(8)
Andy Opel
Chapter 34 Archives
334(9)
Hanno Balz
Part VI Pragmatics of Protest: Protest Practices
Chapter 35 Uttering
343(9)
Constanze Spiess
Chapter 36 Street Protest
352(7)
Matthias Reiss
Chapter 37 Insult and Devaluation
359(7)
John Michael Roberts
Chapter 38 Public Debating
366(6)
Mary E. Triece
Chapter 39 Media Campaigning
372(10)
Johanna Niesyto
Chapter 40 Theatrical Protest
382(7)
Dorothea Kraus
Chapter 41 Movie/Cinema
389(8)
Anna Schober
Chapter 42 Civil Disobedience
397(9)
Helena Flam
Asa Wettergren
Chapter 43 Creating Temporary Autonomous Zones
406(8)
Freia Anders
Chapter 44 Mummery
414(6)
Sebastian Haunss
Chapter 45 Recontextualization of Signs and Fakes
420(7)
David Eugster
Chapter 46 Clandestinity
427(9)
Gilda Zwerman
Chapter 47 Violence/Destruction
436(15)
Peter Sitzer
Wilhelm Heitmeyer
Part VII Pragmatics of Protest: Reactions to Protest Actions
Chapter 48 Political and Institutional Confrontation
451(11)
Lorenzo Bosi
Katrin Uba
Chapter 49 Suppression of Protest
462(10)
Brian Martin
Chapter 50 Cultural Conflicts in the Discursive Field
472(7)
Nick Crossley
Chapter 51 Assimilation of Protest Codes: Advertisement and Mainstream Culture
479(9)
Rudi Maier
Chapter 52 Corporate Reactions
488(11)
Veronika Kneip
Part VIII Pragmatics of Protest: Long-Term Consequences
Chapter 53 Biographical Impact
499(10)
Marco Giugni
Chapter 54 Changing Gender Roles
509(8)
Kristina Schulz
Chapter 55 Founding of Milieus
517(11)
Michael Vester
Chapter 56 Diffusion of Symbolic Forms
528(11)
Dieter Rucht
Chapter 57 Political Correctness
539(8)
Sabine Elsner-Petri
Index 547
Kathrin Fahlenbrach is Professor of Media Studies at the University of Hamburg, Germany. She is the author of Audiovisual Metaphors: Embodied and Affective Aesthetics of Film and Television (2010) and co-editor of Media and Revolt: Strategies and Performances from the 1960s to the Present (2014).