Creating Space by Spreading Atmospheres: Protest Movements From a Phenomenological Perspective

How are spaces constituted through social action, and how do they constitute social action? We address these questions by studying how protesters appropriate spaces by occupying streets and public buildings and by spreading specific atmospheres. We apply Alfred SCHÜTZ's phenomenological take o...

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Main Authors: Sandrine Gukelberger, Christian Meyer
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: FQS 2021-09-01
Series:Forum: Qualitative Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/3796
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spelling doaj-b9a34f7119eb45c9a41338b4dd9c095f2021-09-30T08:01:22ZdeuFQS Forum: Qualitative Social Research1438-56272021-09-0122310.17169/fqs-22.3.3796Creating Space by Spreading Atmospheres: Protest Movements From a Phenomenological PerspectiveSandrine Gukelberger0Christian Meyer1Universität KonstanzUniversität Konstanz How are spaces constituted through social action, and how do they constitute social action? We address these questions by studying how protesters appropriate spaces by occupying streets and public buildings and by spreading specific atmospheres. We apply Alfred SCHÜTZ's phenomenological take on the constitution of multiple realities in terms of "province of meaning" as a heuristic device to capture the diversity of protest atmospheres along with their spatial, affective, and epistemic dimensions—those embodied and situated as well as virtual. This perspective allows us to describe empirical examples of protest situations in South Africa and Senegal where "the streets" and the media meet. Our research material spans documents, tweets, video material collected online, and ethnographic interviews. In this article, we look at how embodied practices reproduce and manifest particular "provinces of meaning" and "protest atmospheres," and how these embodied practices are complemented by social media practices. Our proposed approach not only provides an example of how a social space is created and refigured through social protest, but also allows a further understanding of the situational emergence of protests as collective action that creates "we-experiences." The phenomenological perspective goes beyond the widespread mind/body dualism that underlies so many interpretations of social movement culture. https://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/3796phenomenological sociologysociology of spacerefiguration of spacessocial movementsprotest culturesatmospheres
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandrine Gukelberger
Christian Meyer
spellingShingle Sandrine Gukelberger
Christian Meyer
Creating Space by Spreading Atmospheres: Protest Movements From a Phenomenological Perspective
Forum: Qualitative Social Research
phenomenological sociology
sociology of space
refiguration of spaces
social movements
protest cultures
atmospheres
author_facet Sandrine Gukelberger
Christian Meyer
author_sort Sandrine Gukelberger
title Creating Space by Spreading Atmospheres: Protest Movements From a Phenomenological Perspective
title_short Creating Space by Spreading Atmospheres: Protest Movements From a Phenomenological Perspective
title_full Creating Space by Spreading Atmospheres: Protest Movements From a Phenomenological Perspective
title_fullStr Creating Space by Spreading Atmospheres: Protest Movements From a Phenomenological Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Creating Space by Spreading Atmospheres: Protest Movements From a Phenomenological Perspective
title_sort creating space by spreading atmospheres: protest movements from a phenomenological perspective
publisher FQS
series Forum: Qualitative Social Research
issn 1438-5627
publishDate 2021-09-01
description How are spaces constituted through social action, and how do they constitute social action? We address these questions by studying how protesters appropriate spaces by occupying streets and public buildings and by spreading specific atmospheres. We apply Alfred SCHÜTZ's phenomenological take on the constitution of multiple realities in terms of "province of meaning" as a heuristic device to capture the diversity of protest atmospheres along with their spatial, affective, and epistemic dimensions—those embodied and situated as well as virtual. This perspective allows us to describe empirical examples of protest situations in South Africa and Senegal where "the streets" and the media meet. Our research material spans documents, tweets, video material collected online, and ethnographic interviews. In this article, we look at how embodied practices reproduce and manifest particular "provinces of meaning" and "protest atmospheres," and how these embodied practices are complemented by social media practices. Our proposed approach not only provides an example of how a social space is created and refigured through social protest, but also allows a further understanding of the situational emergence of protests as collective action that creates "we-experiences." The phenomenological perspective goes beyond the widespread mind/body dualism that underlies so many interpretations of social movement culture.
topic phenomenological sociology
sociology of space
refiguration of spaces
social movements
protest cultures
atmospheres
url https://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/3796
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