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El. knyga: Spaces of Public Issues: How Social Media Discourses Shape Public Imaginations of Issue Spatiality

(Freie Universität Berlin, Germany)
  • Formatas: 210 pages
  • Serija: The Refiguration of Space
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Feb-2024
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781003847380
  • Formatas: 210 pages
  • Serija: The Refiguration of Space
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Feb-2024
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781003847380

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"Ideas about matters of public concern are shaped by the spaces associated with them: Events occur in particular places, political regulations apply to specific territories, people in different locations are differentially affected by issues. Yet, political communication research has neglected the question of how the spaces of public issues are constructed in the public sphere. This is especially true for research on social media communication, which is often perceived as placeless. Yet, social media discourses are driven by unequal attention patterns based on users' interests, resources, and abilities. To understand how these patterns manifest spatially, this interdisciplinary monograph builds on public spheres theory, communication infrastructure theory, and urban sociology to develop the framework of issue spatiality. It focuses on how social media users discuss different places in urban policy issue discourses. By applying the framework to four large-scale Twitter discourses on housing markets and cycling infrastructure in two German cities, Berlin and Frankfurt, the research reveals the spatial patterns and inequalities of social media discourses. It demonstrates that digital discourses are overwhelmingly focused on a small number of places in the urban center. These places emerge as the locus of activism and political controversy, while the urban periphery remains hidden or is discussed in purely administrative terms. Places with dense civic infrastructure and privileged residents receive disproportionate attention. The book provides an in-depth look at the ways in which socio-spatial inequalities are inscribed in public communication and shape ideas about societal issues"--

Ideas about matters of public concern are shaped by the spaces associated with them: Events occur in particular places, political regulations apply to specific territories, people in different locations are differentially affected by issues. Yet, political communication research has neglected the question of how the spaces of public issues are constructed in the public sphere. This is especially true for research on social media communication, which is often perceived as placeless. Yet, social media discourses are driven by unequal attention patterns based on users’ interests, resources, and abilities. To understand how these patterns manifest spatially, this interdisciplinary monograph builds on public spheres theory, communication infrastructure theory, and urban sociology to develop the framework of issue spatiality. It focuses on how social media users discuss different places in urban policy issue discourses. By applying the framework to four large-scale Twitter discourses on housing markets and cycling infrastructure in two German cities, Berlin and Frankfurt, the research reveals the spatial patterns and inequalities of social media discourses. It demonstrates that digital discourses are overwhelmingly focused on a small number of places in the urban center. These places emerge as the locus of activism and political controversy, while the urban periphery remains hidden or is discussed in purely administrative terms. Places with dense civic infrastructure and privileged residents receive disproportionate attention. The book provides an in-depth look at the ways in which socio-spatial inequalities are inscribed in public communication and shape ideas about societal issues.



With a focus on how social media users discuss different places in discourses surrounding urban policy, this book applies a novel theoretical framework to large-scale Twitter discourses in order to reveal the spatial patterns and inequalities of social media discourses.

1. Introduction
2. Digital Public Spheres, Socio-Spatial Inequality, and Issue Spatiality
3. Towards the Study of Digital Issue Spaces
4. The Spaces of Contentious Urban Issues on Twitter
5. Conclusion: An Integrative Understanding of Issue Spaces

Daniela Stoltenberg is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Media and Communication Studies at Freie Universität Berlin and the Collaborative Research Center 1265 Re-Figuration of Spaces.