What violent conflict tells us about media and place-making (and vice versa): Ethnographic observations from a revolutionary uprising
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
Violent conflict highlights the significance of place to media and invites for an understanding of media as place-making. Through ethnographic work with information activists and journalists in revolutionary Egypt, Grønlykke Mollerup argues for the importance of understanding media as vitally emplaced in the phenomenological world in the same way violence is. She unfolds this argument by showing how both media and violence are co-constitutive of places and crucially entangled in the movement of people, rocks, snipers’ bullets and more.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Theorising Media and Conflict |
Editors | Philipp Budka , Birgit Bräuchler |
Volume | Berghahn Series Anthropology of Media |
Place of Publication | New York & Oxford |
Publisher | Berghahn Books |
Publication date | Apr 2020 |
Edition | 1 |
Pages | 181-195 |
Chapter | 10 |
ISBN (Print) | 978-1-78920-682-1 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 978-1-78920-683-8 |
Publication status | Published - Apr 2020 |
Series | Anthropology of Media |
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Volume | 8 |
- Faculty of Humanities - conflict, media, ethnography, Egypt, place-making
Research areas
ID: 185230850