‘Anne Kaun’s book proficiently shows the changes of media practices and technologies within protest movements … recommend the book to everybody interested in new perspectives on media and social activism.’
Journal of Media and Communication‘Finally, a historically nuanced book on the role of media in protest movements. Kaun provides a very timely comparative analysis of media technologies in times of crisis. I recommend this book to all students interested in media and social activism.’
José van Dijck, author of The Culture of Connectivity
‘Kaun gives us important resources for thinking through the challenges we face today as scholars and activists committed to transformative and radical communication.’
Max Haiven, co-author of The Radical Imagination
‘Kaun draws on a range of rich empirical material, using illuminating historical analysis to reflect on contemporary protest through the critical categories of time, space and speed. A must-read book for academics and activists alike.’
Natalie Fenton, author of Digital, Political, Radical
‘Economic crises such as the Great Recession of 2008 are not just moments of distress and despair. They are also occasions in which new political alternatives are born and new political media practices emerge as Anne Kaun demonstrates in this thoughtful and engaging book.’
Paolo Gerbaudo, author of Tweets and the Streets: Social media and Contemporary Activism
‘Kaun offers some much needed perspective on the current discourses surrounding digital media and activism, as well as a nuanced, valuable and perhaps most importantly measured evaluation of the importance of media to political resistance.’
Joss Hands, Newcastle University