05619oam 2200685 c 450 991096204240332120260102090118.03-8382-7495-49783838274959(CKB)4520000000000710(MiAaPQ)EBC6729532(Au-PeEL)EBL6729532(OCoLC)1272994830(ibidem)9783838274959(EXLCZ)99452000000000071020260102d2021 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierUrban Protest A Spatial Perspective on Kyiv, Minsk, and Moscow /Arve Hansen, Andreas Umland, Julie Wilhelmsen1st ed.Hannoveribidem20211 online resource (293 pages)Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society2343-8382-1495-1 Intro -- Figures -- Abbreviations -- A Note on Language -- Foreword -- Preface -- 1 Starting Point -- Part I -- 2 Space in Context -- 2.1 Complexities of Urban Contention -- 2.1.1 Form -- 2.1.2 Motivation -- 2.1.3 Waves -- 2.2 Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia -- 2.3 Relevance -- 3 Mapping the Field -- 3.1 Protests -- 3.1.1 Repertoires -- 3.1.2 Nonviolent Contention -- 3.1.3 Colour Revolutions -- 3.1.4 Non-spatial Factors -- 3.2 Space -- 3.2.1 Public Space -- 3.2.2 Physical Space -- 3.2.3 Contested Spaces -- 3.3 The Gap -- 4 Definitions and Research Questions -- 4.1 What Is a Mass Protest? -- 4.2 What Is Urban Public Space? -- 4.3 Research Questions -- 5 Theorising and Development -- 5.1 Approaches to Theorising -- 5.1.1 Field Work -- 5.1.2 Respondents -- 5.1.3 Mapping -- 5.2 Ethical Considerations -- 5.2.1 Interview Ethics -- 5.2.2 Practical Utility -- 5.3 Geographical Determinism -- 5.4 Conception -- 5.4.1 M.A. Thesis -- 5.4.2 PhD Proposal -- 5.5 Theorising -- 5.5.1 Prestudy -- 5.5.2 Formulating a Theory -- 5.5.3 Transitional Study -- 5.6 Causal Chains -- 5.7 Main Study -- 5.8 Post-test Theorising -- 6 Variables and Methodology -- 6.1 Independent Variables -- 6.1.1 Perceived Elements -- 6.1.2 Physical Elements -- 6.1.3 Social Elements -- 6.2 Intermediary Variables -- 6.2.1 Spatial Qualities -- 6.2.2 The Political Environment -- 6.3 Dependent Variables -- 6.3.1 Emergence -- 6.3.2 Realisation -- 6.3.3 Impact -- Part II -- 7 Prestudy -- 7.1 Physical Space -- 7.1.1 Spatial and Urban History -- 7.1.2 Daily Use -- 7.1.3 Protest Space -- 7.2 Symbolic Value -- 7.2.1 25 Years of Protest -- 7.3 Function -- 7.4 Conclusions -- 8 Transitional Study -- 8.1 A Spatial Perspective -- 8.2 Belarusian Protests from Glasnost' to Lukashenka -- 8.3 Perceived elements -- 8.3.1 October Square -- 8.3.2 Independence Square -- 8.4 Social Elements -- 8.4.1 The Political Centre.8.4.2 The People's Centre -- 8.4.3 Independence Square -- 8.4.4 October Square -- 8.5 Physical Elements -- 8.5.1 October Square and Ploshcha 2006 -- 8.5.2 Independence Square and Ploshcha 2010 -- 8.6 Conclusions -- 9 Main Study -- 9.1 Towards a Spatial Perspective -- 9.1.1 Spatial Elements -- 9.1.2 Spatial Qualities and the Political Environment -- 9.1.3 Protest Areas -- 9.2 Moscow, Swamp Square and the March of Millions -- 9.2.1 The Political Environment of Moscow -- 9.2.2 Public Spaces in Moscow -- 9.2.3 The Elements -- 9.2.4 Spatial Qualities -- 9.2.5 Emergence, Realization, Impact -- 9.3 Conclusions -- Part III -- 10 To Paris and Beyond -- 10.1 Republic Square and the Yellow Vests -- 10.1.1 Applying the Model -- 10.2 Summary and Conclusions -- 10.2.1 "So what?" -- 10.2.2 Limitations -- 10.3 Moving On -- References -- Index.Urban space is an important part of the political environment—a place where people congregate to discuss, deliberate, and interact with each other. In times of great public discontent, people often turn to urban spaces to make their opinions heard and to demand change, with varying degrees of success. How are mass protests affected by the urban public space in which they occur? This book provides a theoretical model to analyze city spaces, based on the use of theories from political science, urban planning, and sociology. Hansen’s approach consists of a mapping of the causal mechanisms between spatial elements, the political environment, and their combined effects on protests. This mapping is applied to three case studies—Kyiv, Minsk, and Moscow. In addition to the spatial perspective model, Urban Protest provides new insights as to how the interactions in space occur, and demonstrates how geography can create limitations and opportunities in a large variety of ways.Soviet and post-Soviet politics and society ;Volume 234.collective actioncolour revolutionDemonstrationGeographyMass ProtestsPolitical environmentPublic spaceUrban contentionUrbanismcollective actioncolour revolutionDemonstrationGeographyMass ProtestsPolitical environmentPublic spaceUrban contentionUrbanism307.76Hansen Arveaut1108009Umland AndreasDr.edtWilhelmsen JulieauiMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910962042403321Urban protest3988670UNINA03353nam 22007453 450 991097823970332120250313080342.03-8394-7061-710.1515/9783839470619(CKB)37515878100041(MiAaPQ)EBC31953950(Au-PeEL)EBL31953950(DE-B1597)678418(DE-B1597)9783839470619(OCoLC)1507699536(ScCtBLL)ed09d878-5c89-42b1-b193-c55091f1adf9(EXLCZ)993751587810004120250313d2025 uy 0gerur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierSprache Entgrenzen Beiträge Zu Einer Kulturwissenschaftlichen Linguistik1st ed.Bielefeld :transcript Verlag,2025.©2025.1 online resource (291 pages)Studien der Kulturwissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft ;33-8376-7061-9 Frontmatter -- Editorial -- Inhalt -- Sprache entgrenzen -- Sprache, Sprechen und Interagieren zwischen Mensch und Maschine -- »Es ist vor allen Dingen dieser Ton« -- Einstimmen mit Sprachassistenten -- Die Heterogenität der Sprechenden -- »Man hat schon so einen Austausch irgendwie« -- Sprache, Sprechen und Interagieren in mediatisierten Kontexten -- Kommunikationspraktiken mit Vertreter*innen der Spezies Oktopus -- Die Stimme als Interface -- Sprache-Sprechen, Hören, Sehen, Fühlen -- Sprechen in audiovisuellen MedienInformations- und Medientechnologien bringen das Bild »des Menschen« als exklusiv sprachliches Wesen an seine Grenzen: Was erscheint als sprachlicher »Standardfall«? Was bleibt bislang unberücksichtigt und warum? Und was sagen die Befunde über (sprach-)wissenschaftliche und alltagsweltliche Praktiken von Wissensproduktion über und mit Sprache aus? Die Beiträgerinnen widmen sich diversen hybriden Kommunikationskontexten, die etablierte Sprachvorstellungen herausfordern, so zum Beispiel Mensch-Maschine-, Mensch-Tier- oder mediatisierte Interaktionen. Auf Grundlage interaktiver Grenzüberschreitungen unternehmen sie eine Entgrenzung von »Sprache« – und führen so Linguistik und Kulturwissenschaften zusammen.LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / GeneralbisacshAnimal.Cultural Studies.Cultural Theory.Culture.Human.Interaction.Interaktion.Kultur.Kulturtheorie.Kulturwissenschaft.Language.Linguistics.Machine.Maschine.Media.Medien.Mensch.Posthumanism.Posthumanismus.Sprache.Sprachwissenschaft.Tier.LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General.Vallentin Rita Tamara991414Arndt Maria1782233MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910978239703321Sprache Entgrenzen4334983UNINA