The Citizen Professional, Mediatization, and the creation of a Public Domain

Situated within the transition experienced by our welfare states, citizens have become ever more involved in the re-use of derelict public housing stock throughout Europe. These citizens are tentatively to be called ‘citizen professionals’ in the urban realm, a term that serves as a sensitizing con...

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Main Author: Karin Christof
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Linköping University Electronic Press 2018-02-01
Series:Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cultureunbound.ep.liu.se/article/view/1828
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spelling doaj-b5e39f9f126a418b8453e0a1a34629e42020-11-25T04:09:47ZengLinköping University Electronic PressCulture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research2000-15252018-02-019310.3384/cu.2000.1525.1793279The Citizen Professional, Mediatization, and the creation of a Public DomainKarin Christof0Faculty of Sociology and Cultural Studies, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Situated within the transition experienced by our welfare states, citizens have become ever more involved in the re-use of derelict public housing stock throughout Europe. These citizens are tentatively to be called ‘citizen professionals’ in the urban realm, a term that serves as a sensitizing concept to explore the social worlds of their contributions to the public domain. Employing various types of media to communicate their progress and success, these urban actors seek to gain the trust of the neighborhood and governmental institutions to sustain their projects within a broader community. Just as the media influence and structure cultural domains and society as a whole, the social-cultural activities carried out by citizen professionals in the public domain are mediatized not only by the actors themselves, but also by municipal organizations, policy workers, and governmental institutions. Grounding mediatization as a socio-spatial concept within empirical practice, the article examines the practices of citizen professionals and describes how they endeavor to attain public acknowledgment by representing their projects as showcases within a public domain. The article builds on pilot interviews conducted in Rotterdam (NAC, Reading Room West) and Vienna (Paradocks) to expound on the projects as lived spaces between mediatized and physical environments. Positioning citizen professionals within contemporary developments in the urban field, the article then investigates the underlying values of the spatial interventions, as well as how governmental bodies relate to their practices. Seen through the lens of mediatization, the article provides insights into how citizen professionals employ their social imaginaries and mobilize their activities around their agenda regarding the creation of a public domain. https://cultureunbound.ep.liu.se/article/view/1828Public domainmediatizationwelfare statescitizen professionalre-use public housing stocksocial imaginaries
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karin Christof
spellingShingle Karin Christof
The Citizen Professional, Mediatization, and the creation of a Public Domain
Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
Public domain
mediatization
welfare states
citizen professional
re-use public housing stock
social imaginaries
author_facet Karin Christof
author_sort Karin Christof
title The Citizen Professional, Mediatization, and the creation of a Public Domain
title_short The Citizen Professional, Mediatization, and the creation of a Public Domain
title_full The Citizen Professional, Mediatization, and the creation of a Public Domain
title_fullStr The Citizen Professional, Mediatization, and the creation of a Public Domain
title_full_unstemmed The Citizen Professional, Mediatization, and the creation of a Public Domain
title_sort citizen professional, mediatization, and the creation of a public domain
publisher Linköping University Electronic Press
series Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research
issn 2000-1525
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Situated within the transition experienced by our welfare states, citizens have become ever more involved in the re-use of derelict public housing stock throughout Europe. These citizens are tentatively to be called ‘citizen professionals’ in the urban realm, a term that serves as a sensitizing concept to explore the social worlds of their contributions to the public domain. Employing various types of media to communicate their progress and success, these urban actors seek to gain the trust of the neighborhood and governmental institutions to sustain their projects within a broader community. Just as the media influence and structure cultural domains and society as a whole, the social-cultural activities carried out by citizen professionals in the public domain are mediatized not only by the actors themselves, but also by municipal organizations, policy workers, and governmental institutions. Grounding mediatization as a socio-spatial concept within empirical practice, the article examines the practices of citizen professionals and describes how they endeavor to attain public acknowledgment by representing their projects as showcases within a public domain. The article builds on pilot interviews conducted in Rotterdam (NAC, Reading Room West) and Vienna (Paradocks) to expound on the projects as lived spaces between mediatized and physical environments. Positioning citizen professionals within contemporary developments in the urban field, the article then investigates the underlying values of the spatial interventions, as well as how governmental bodies relate to their practices. Seen through the lens of mediatization, the article provides insights into how citizen professionals employ their social imaginaries and mobilize their activities around their agenda regarding the creation of a public domain.
topic Public domain
mediatization
welfare states
citizen professional
re-use public housing stock
social imaginaries
url https://cultureunbound.ep.liu.se/article/view/1828
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