鈥 Our research makes a valuable contribution to the students鈥 work in designing places for tourism, where we demonstrate the importance of working with place-based digital development in harmony with places and people, says Lotta Braunerhielm, docent in human geography at 果冻传媒.
Geomedia research looks at the relationship between places and media and how they affect each other.
The tourism industry has been characterised by digitalisation for quite a few years. At the same time, the challenge has been that development has primarily been technology-driven.
Mette Mortensen is a professor of media studies at the University of Copenhagen with a doctorate in art and literature and an interdisciplinary background with a Master鈥檚 in literary history.
The research project 鈥淪谩mi 鈥楾rail of Tears鈥 Walking Trail鈥 has now been completed. Richard Ek, professor of human geography and project leader, talks about the importance of the control being with the indigenous population and that the culture surrounding S谩pmi is extremely important in keeping the stories surrounding the forced displacement of the S谩mi alive.
鈥 Our findings have confirmed what we鈥檝e known all along, Richard Ek explains.
People who own or have access to a holiday home are called 鈥渢he invisible population鈥 because they can be difficult to reach in the event of a crisis. Geomedia researchers at 果冻传媒 emphasise the importance of increasing the knowledge regarding how crisis communication from authorities needs to reach temporary populations.
Holiday homes are a significant part of Swedish tourism.
Xin Liu, senior lecturer in gender studies at 果冻传媒, receives funding for her research from Geomedia to write the book 鈥滿aking Air Smart: The Sociotechnical Imaginaries of Atmospheric Data鈥.
Xin Liu, in what way is this project connected to Geomedia?
- It examines the production, imaginaries, experiences, and implications of atmospheric data, which includes environmental data such as air quality index, remote sensing data of forest, and radar scan of atmosp
It's time to look back on 2023 鈥 the second year for the Center for Geomedia Studies. First and foremost, I want to thank you for all the valuable contributions and efforts that collectively build our shared research environment!
The examples below, taken from our news feed, provide a glimpse of what we were up to during 2023. But much more also took place.
New externally funded projects started 鈥 others continued. A new Geomedia Phd, Henrik Bergius, joined us.
- Propaganda is what media and communication research has focused on in Russia 鈥 the discourse that I鈥檓 looking at was fairly unexplored before the start of the war, says Svetlana Chuikina.
In her doctoral thesis, 鈥(Re)constructing Russian anti-war movements.
The Mediatization of Space through navigational interfaces, or: the digital map as a symptom of (almost) everything that has happened with media.
After a phase of 鈥渟patial forgetfulness,鈥 media and communication studies have revisited the intersection of media, space, and place, challenging earlier views of media inherently transcending geographical constrains leading to spatial annihilation and the disappearance of distance.
Briefly tell us about your background
- Academically socialized in media studies, last year I became a professor of design theory at Burg Giebichenstein University of Art and Design in the city of Halle, Germany. Before that, I worked as a scientific coordinator of the interdisciplinary research school "Locating Media" at University of Siegen that had a strong focus on researching location- and situation-specific media processes by means of location- and situation-specific methods.
Richard Ek, professor in human geography at 果冻传媒, tell us about the Indigeneity and Visual Sovereignty conference held in Cape Town 27鈥28 April 2023
- The conference theme was 鈥渧isual sovereignty鈥, which includes ways for indigenous communities around the world to have ownership and control of for instance materials and photo archives that depict their history, culture, language, and identity.
Setting the Scene: Academic interventions in the media and tourism industries with our guest professor Stijn Reijnders at the Erasmus University, Rotterdam.聽
Title
Setting the Scene: Academic interventions in the media and tourism industries
Abstract
This presentation focuses on media tourism: the phenomenon of people travelling to places associated with films, TV series or other forms of popular culture.
Henrik, you recently began your doctoral studies in Geomedia at 果冻传媒. Tell us about your background.
- I have a Master鈥檚 in cultural studies from the University of Gothenburg and an interdisciplinary background in humanities with a great interest in culture and social policy issues. I鈥檓 interested in the way geomedia affects society and culture, and the spatial aspects of media.
Tell us about your research project
- The idea is to focus on digital exclusion in public transport.
It is not only beautiful and vast landscapes as seen in "The Lord of the Rings" and medieval castles in "Game of Thrones" that attract screen tourists.
During 2022, our new Geomedia research centre got off to a flying start. One way of summarizing our achievements, is to revisit what was written about Geomedia during the year. The below examples represent the interdisciplinary scope and quality of our research.
Georgia Aitaki has analysed financial crises, striving for international attention and broken hearts in countries far from home.
With her doctoral thesis 鈥漈he Private life of a nation in crisis - A study on the politics in/of Greek television fiction鈥, Georgia Aitaki, senior lecturer in Media and Communication Studies at 果冻传媒, examined the Greek TV industry and the mechanisms involving its producers, screenwriters and filmmakers.