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Movement Societies and Digital Protest: Fan Activism and Other Nonpolitical Protest Online
by
Kimport, Katrina
, Earl, Jennifer
in
Activism
/ Appropriation
/ Boycotts
/ Campaigns
/ Computer Mediated Communication
/ Culture
/ Demonstrations & protests
/ Digital technology
/ Discontent
/ Hypotheses
/ Internet
/ Letter writing
/ Mass settings
/ Political activism
/ Political movements
/ Political protests
/ Popular culture
/ Protest Movements
/ Resistance
/ Science fiction fandom
/ Social activism
/ Social Movements
/ Sociological theory
/ Sociologists
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of knowledge and sociology of culture
/ Sociology of leisure and mass culture
/ Sports fans
/ Studies
/ Television networks
/ Warehouses
/ Websites
2009
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Movement Societies and Digital Protest: Fan Activism and Other Nonpolitical Protest Online
by
Kimport, Katrina
, Earl, Jennifer
in
Activism
/ Appropriation
/ Boycotts
/ Campaigns
/ Computer Mediated Communication
/ Culture
/ Demonstrations & protests
/ Digital technology
/ Discontent
/ Hypotheses
/ Internet
/ Letter writing
/ Mass settings
/ Political activism
/ Political movements
/ Political protests
/ Popular culture
/ Protest Movements
/ Resistance
/ Science fiction fandom
/ Social activism
/ Social Movements
/ Sociological theory
/ Sociologists
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of knowledge and sociology of culture
/ Sociology of leisure and mass culture
/ Sports fans
/ Studies
/ Television networks
/ Warehouses
/ Websites
2009
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Do you wish to request the book?
Movement Societies and Digital Protest: Fan Activism and Other Nonpolitical Protest Online
by
Kimport, Katrina
, Earl, Jennifer
in
Activism
/ Appropriation
/ Boycotts
/ Campaigns
/ Computer Mediated Communication
/ Culture
/ Demonstrations & protests
/ Digital technology
/ Discontent
/ Hypotheses
/ Internet
/ Letter writing
/ Mass settings
/ Political activism
/ Political movements
/ Political protests
/ Popular culture
/ Protest Movements
/ Resistance
/ Science fiction fandom
/ Social activism
/ Social Movements
/ Sociological theory
/ Sociologists
/ Sociology
/ Sociology of knowledge and sociology of culture
/ Sociology of leisure and mass culture
/ Sports fans
/ Studies
/ Television networks
/ Warehouses
/ Websites
2009
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Movement Societies and Digital Protest: Fan Activism and Other Nonpolitical Protest Online
Journal Article
Movement Societies and Digital Protest: Fan Activism and Other Nonpolitical Protest Online
2009
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Overview
Sociologists of culture studying \"fan activism\" have noted an apparent increase in its volume, which they attribute to the growing use of the Internet to register fan claims. However, scholars have yet to measure the extent of contemporary fan activism, account for why fan discontent has been expressed through protest, or precisely specify the role of the Internet in this expansion. We argue that these questions can be addressed by drawing on a growing body of work by social movement scholars on \"movement societies,\" and more particularly on a nascent thread of this approach we develop that theorizes the appropriation of protest practices for causes outside the purview of traditional social movements. Theorizing that the Internet, as a new media, is positioned to accelerate the diffusion of protest practices, we develop and test hypotheses about the use of movement practices for fan activism and other nonpolitical claims online using data on claims made in quasi-random samples of online petitions, boycotts, and e-mailing or letter-writing campaigns. Results are supportive of our hypotheses, showing that diverse claims are being pursued online, including culturally-oriented and consumer-based claims that look very different from traditional social movement claims. Findings have implications for students of social movements, sociologists of culture, and Internet studies.
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell,SAGE Publications,Blackwell Publishing Inc,Wiley,American Sociological Association
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