The empirical studies in this book explore the implications of the new digital conditions for the ways in which digitally mediated social interactions, practices and environments shape everyday participation, engagement or protest and their subjective as well societal meaning.
Introduction: (Mis-)Understanding political participation
Jeffrey Wimmer, Cornelia Wallner, Rainer Winter, and Karoline Oelsner
Part I: Practices of participation and citizenship
1. (New) Forms of digital participation? Toward a resource-model of adolescents' digital engagement
Annika Schreiter, Sven Joeckel and Klaus Kamps
2. Long-lasting shadows of (post)communism? Generational and ethnic divides in political and civic participation in Estonia
Veronika Kalmus, Ragne Kõuts-Klemm, Mai Beilmann, Andu Rämmer and Signe Opermann
3. Enhanced inter-visibility. The experience of civic engagement in social media
Maria Francesca Murru
4. 'I am not a consumer person' - Political participation in repair cafés
Sigrid Kannengießer
5. Intimate citizenship politics and digital media: Teens' discourses, sexual normativities and popular social media
Sander de Ridder and Sofie van Bauwel
Part II: Mediated representations of participation and citizenship
6. The Indignados in the European Press: beyond the protest paradigm?
Maria Kyriakidou, José Javier Olivas Osuna and Maximillian Hänska Ahy
7. Speak your mind: Mediatized political participation through second screens.
Udo Göttlich and Martin R. Herbers
8. "My body, my decision". The abortion debate and twitter as a counterpublic sphere for women in Turkey
Perrin Ögün Emre and Gülüm Sener
9. Repeat, remediate, resist? Meme activism in the context of the refugee crisis
Elena Pilipets and Rainer Winter
Part III: (Re-)Framing participation and citizenship
10. Towards a framework for studying political participation in social media
Julie Uldam and Anne Kaun
11. Protest or collaboration? How perceived opportunities and constraints shape the activities of anti-infrastructure citizen action groups
Marco Braeuer and Jens Wolling
12. Rethinking otherness and cultural citizenship: Cosmopolitanism and new platforms
Elke Grittmann and Tanja Thomas
13. Mapping the 'search agenda': A citizen-centric approach to electoral information flows
Filippo Trevisan, Andrew Hoskins, Sarah Oates and Dounia Mahlouly
Jeffrey Wimmer is Professor in the Institute of Media, Knowledge and Communication at Augsburg University, Germany.
Cornelia Wallner is a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Communication Science and Media Studies at Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany.
Rainer Winter is Professor of Media and Cultural Theory and head of the Institute of Media and Communication Studies at Klagenfurt University, Austria.
Karoline Oelsner is a researcher in the Department of Public Relations and Communication of Technology at Ilmenau University of Technology, Germany.