23
The Use of Social Media to Subvert the Course of Justice Occupying the Olympic Games @jennifermjones #media2012

Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Slides from Politics, Sport and Identity Conference at Southampton Solent University. 24th February, 2012.

Citation preview

Page 1: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

The Use of Social Media to Subvert the Course of Justice

Occupying the Olympic

Games

@jennifermjones #media2012

Page 2: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

dominant narratives

access to information

Page 3: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

user generated content

multi-platform experiences

mobile technologies

(Jenkins, 2006)

Page 4: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

mode of production/distribution

forms of content

aesthetic quality

interaction with audiences

(Atton, 2002)

Page 5: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

Challenge dominant narratives

Voice to marginal communities

Build networks between groups

(Downing, 2001)

Page 6: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 7: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 8: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

different modes of address

different perspectives

story selection

(Goode, 2009: 1070)

Page 9: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

Political positioning

Page 10: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

“It is not easy to be both an academic and an activist. The values, the audiences and the constraints are different.

Sitting down to write, you can feel yourself pulled in two different ways. The result is often muddled thinking and murky prose.There is too much ranting for an academic audience, and too much goobledgook for the activists. In

many cases, there is no prose at all, only silence and pages crumbled in the wastebasket or erased on the

screen.” (Neale, 2008 :217)

Page 11: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

Occupying the Olympics

Page 12: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 13: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 14: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 15: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

Media Intervention

Page 16: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 17: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 18: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 19: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 20: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice
Page 21: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

access

Page 22: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

identity

Page 23: Occupying the Olympics: The Use of social media to subvert the course of justice

jennifermjones.net#media2012

@jennifermjones