http://www.westminster.ac.uk/camri/research-seminars/youth-street-politics-in-the-mediaon-the-street
 

January 15, 2014
Johanna Sumiala
Youth Street Politics in the Media/on the Street
14:00-16:00
University of Westminster
Harrow Campus, 
Room A6.8

Registration at latest until January 12, per e-mail to [email protected]

Abstract
In recent years, the issue of boundary has attracted considerable interest 
among scholars of cultural and media geography, anthropology, cultural studies, 
sociology and media studies (see e.g. Soja 2010; Massey 2005; Dikec 2007; 
Fassin 2010). In this presentation I will examine urban youth life from the 
perspective of crossing of different physical, virtual and symbolic boundaries. 
To follow Malone’s (2002: 2) insight: ”All boundaries, whether national, global 
or simply street names on a road map are socially constructed. They are as much 
the products of society as are other social relations that mark the landscape. 
For this reason, boundaries matter. They construct our sense of identity in the 
places we inhabit and they organize our social space through geographies of 
power.” 
The crossing of different boundaries has become a routinized practice of 
everyday life for many young people. McLuhan’s famous idea on media as an 
extension of man is truer than ever as young people connect themselves to the 
surrounding realities and social worlds with camera phones and Facebook 
postings. As urban city life has become increasingly mediatized the meanings of 
geographical places and spaces have been seen to diminish simultaneously when 
the online environments have gained new significance (e.g. Baym & boyd 2012). 
Yet, how these geographical and virtual realms are connected or separated and 
what kind of hierarchies and power relations are created and maintained between 
these two scales of spatialities in the everyday experiences of young people 
still remains much under theorized, let alone empirically researched. 
The goal of this presentation is to sketch the concept of ‘street politics’ to 
better grasp the dynamics of constant crossings of different boundaries in 
youth life. In this exercise of sketching street politics, I will pay special 
attention to the intersection of local, national, transnational and global 
dimensions of street and the media, the role of the interface between the 
private and the public in the street and the media and the contested interplay 
between the two as both the embodied and the imagined. The theoretical approach 
to street politics is complemented with empirical examples drawing on media and 
street ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Tower Hamlets London and Malmi 
Helsinki. The research project Youth Street Politics in the Media Age: Helsinki 
and London Compared is carried out in the University of Helsinki, The Finnish 
Youth Research Society, UCL, in cooperation with the Tampere University of 
Applied Sciences, The British Council, and The Finnish Inst
 itute in
  London. 
For more info, please visit: http://blogs.helsinki.fi/streetpolitics/

Bio:
Johanna Sumiala, Ph.D., is an adjunct professor in the Department of Social 
Research/Media and Communication Studies at the University of Helsinki, 
Finland, and a senior research fellow at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced 
Studies. Her main interests are media and social theory, social media, media 
anthropology, virtual ethnography, ritual theory, media and violence. Her 
studies have been published in both English and Finnish. In addition to writing 
numerous articles for such journals as Media, Culture & Society; M/C journal, 
Communication, Culture & Critique; and Social Anthropology, she has co-edited 
and contributed to several books, including Implications of the Sacred (2006), 
Images and Communities (2007) and School Shootings: Mediatized Violence in a 
Global Age (2012). Her most recent monograph, Media and Ritual: Death, 
Community and Everyday Life, was published by Routledge in 2012.

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