Archive for Talks

Takahashi slides @ SMC


I did a talk on creative net cultures at the Norrlandsoperan restaurant today. The event was arranged by Social Media Club in Umeå, and I was glad to see that so many people turned up for my lunch lecture. The crowd was mixed, the reaction was good, and all in all it was nice — as always — to meet practitioners working in those fields that I research.


The SMC people had warned me that the large windows of the restaurant tended to make it difficult to show any slides in there. Still, I decided to try it anyway, but with super clear slides. I then remembered having read about the Takahashi presentation method a while back. I did a variant of that by using extra large text on my slides — even though not switching slides as rapidly as seems to be required for a textbook Takahashi or Lessig presentation and it worked out nice.


Research update

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I am sending in two applications for research funding this week. One is on social media and political participation, and the other is on independent computer games and subcultural innovation. I will take part in VIRT3C in Hull, UK in March, and I also recently started a collaboration with the Crisis and Media Society Research Program at Helsinki University. Later this week, we will host yet another event in HUMlab. This time it is about presenting our research to potential funders. My slide for that is posted above. It was a bit of a challenge to summarize my research into one single image, but I guess it will work.


Common Culture of Umeå

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I was invited to give a talk this Saturday at the free culture festival Common Culture of Umeå. I presented some of the results from my research project about cultures of online piracy, and concluded with discussing a set of theoretical concepts relating to the field of participatory culture in general. This event was a great opportunity to talk about, and discuss, issues that I do research on with young people that take an active part in such subcultures that interest me from the academic perspective.


It was inspiring to see that my research results and perspectives seemed to converge with their ways of thinking, even though we have come into this field from different directions, and navigate it in different ways. I have been toying for some time with the idea of writing something about what I would call “subcultural innovation”, and this experience fuelled these ideas even more.


DVIS at the Swedish victimological conference

Today, we are presenting a new research project called DVIS – Domestic Violence and the Internet in Sweden. The goal of this project is to map how victims of domestic violence in Sweden are using the internet and social media both to find information and to connect with networks of people that they may not otherwise have access to when living in situations of domestic violence.


This project is planned over three years, and will end with a symposium to which policy makers, victim’s rights advocates, and researchers will be invited in order to start a discussion about domestic violence victims’ habits online and how we can learn from these habits so as to provide information and support to the people who need it.


One thing that we have noticed, just in the short amount of time since we have begun this project, is how much networking and conversation is going on outside of forums that are dedicated to domestic abuse support. Perhaps this is an issue of safety, as cookies to places like Post Secret, Twitter and Second Life landmarks are not as dangerous as cookies to women’s (and men’s) help organizations. Actually, PostSecret has a very interesting and active community and when postcards are posted that talk about abuse, there are often many instances of other’s ‘reporting’ or showing solidarity through telling similar accounts.


Beyond systems of support, what happens when this technology – that we argue could play an important role in providing a social network when real-world networks have been removed – is used against the victim? If the aide agency does not have a warning, will the user think of clearing – or know how to clear – the browser history? Will pictures posted on Facebook of a child’s birthday party, which the uploader thought only a select few would be able to see, but due to holes in security when commenting on something, provide a way for an abuser to find the victim’s location?


More information about the DVIS project can be found on the project’s website here.


The presentation that we will give today can be found here (in Swedish).


Helsinki reflections

helsinki_venueI am now on my way home from the international conference on Violence and Network Society: School Shootings and Social Violence in Contemporary Public Life hosted by the Department of Communciation at Helsinki University. All in all, this two-day cross disciplinary event about the mediation and communication of school shootings, terrorism and other forms of social violence was excellent. The first conference day was ended with a strong performance “About the Making of a Dangerous Individual” by British/Finnish artist Steve Pratt. I also got the chance to chat with Steve, and he gave me DVD of one of his performances relating to communicating controversial content through video, and we agreed that I should give him some comments on that from my research perspective. The second day of the conference was ended on a similarly thought provoking note with the screening of  Estonian director Ilmar Raags movie “The Class“. Raag also took part in one of the conference panels.


For my own part, I managed to get in contact with a number of interesting people, most notably a group of visual researchers from Jacobs University Bremen headed by Professor Marion G. Müller, but I also had interesting conversations with the three prominent keynote speakers (Douglas Kellner, Barbie Zelizer, and Stewart Clegg) as well as with a number of other people that I plan to stay in contact with, for example Glenn Muschert and Kari-Andén Papadopoulos. My own presentation went really well, and there seemed to be a large interest in the methods I have used. In the sessions I attended, I particularly enjoyed the presentation on “Violence, Victims and Emotionality in Finnish Crime-Appeal Programming” by Mirka Smolej. Her interesting research is quite reminiscent of things I work on in my project on crime victims in the Swedish press.


Talking to teachers about YouTube

Yesterday Stephanie and I talked to a group of teachers about the habits of Swedish youth using YouTube and the way that these habits are presented in the media, the historical presentation of new technologies in media, as well as a small presentation of theoretical terms used in this type of research. The talk was very well received. I think this kind of interaction is so important in research. By having a discussion with teachers, we are pushing our results down a chain of knowledge and hopefully the creators of these videos, and the knowledge that they bring to a discussion, can be met by the interest and knowledge of their (formalized) teachers in order to create opportunities for using media/technology in classroom settings.


Here are some of the materials we used:
Prezi presentation of YouTube clips


The project website, http://www.yapa.se


The project video:






Doing discursive networks at CAQR

Me and my colleague will be in Utrecht, Netherlands, for CAQR2009 (2nd International Conference on Computer-Aided Qualitative Research) on June 4th and 5th. Our paper is related to my project on crime victim discourse, but the presentation will focus on methodological aspects.


DISCURSIVE NETWORKS: VISUALIZING MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF CRIME VICTIMS USING PAJEK


This presentation will outline a method for text analysis which combines qualitative discourse analysis and quantitative network analysis. The approach has been developed as a response to the fact that the traditional variety of quantitative content analysis tends to decontextualize data to an extent that makes results potentially meaningless. On the other hand, much of qualitative discourse analysis – a field from which the authors themselves originate – is quite insensitive to things such as frequencies and correlations. It seems ideal to be able to combine the advantages of the two approaches without losing too much complexity.


One of the challenges faced by qualitative text analysis in the 21st century is related to the specific considerations that need to be made when data collection or fieldwork is carried out on the Internet. This presentation concentrates on one particular type of online data, namely print newspaper articles available in digitized form from fulltext databases. Our specific analytical example comes from a research project in which media representations of crime victims have been analyzed.


We will introduce a method that can be useful in working with such material. Even though the approach could be applied to any type of text data, its advantages become more apparent in the case of online fulltext data. This is because the sheer volume of text collected in this way – and also quite fast − easily exceeds the amount collected through traditional fieldwork or manual archival studies. In order to come to grips with these large corpora of text, some sort of quantitative strategy of analysis is called for. But since the straightforward word counting of standard content analysis is not a viable option from the perspective of cultural analysis, we want instead to sketch out an approach combining the discourse theory of Laclau & Mouffe with bibliometric and network analytical tools. In our particular case, we have used the freeware applications Bibexcel and Pajek in order to prepare the text data, analyze co-occuring concepts within in, and visualize the results in the form of vector based network maps.