Participatory actions in public spaces are practices of encounter with the potential to reinforce social ties and foster a renewed sense of belonging to places. They are well-established and widely practiced – both at the national level [1] and internationally [2, 3] – as modes of exploration [4] and participation that are located at the intersection between different disciplinary domains. The particular form of participatory action discussed here ideally takes place on the street, in squares, and on public ground, via interventions that are often temporary in nature and involve the transformation, but even more fundamentally the re-appropriation, of collective space. The advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, among its numerous repercussions, has also made it difficult if not impossible to carry out such forms of participation in person and on public ground. It has thus become necessary to modify and reformulate the ways in which participatory action is implemented, so as to continue harnessing its communicative power, and to identify new ways of fostering participation, at a time when it is needed more urgently than ever to counteract the risk of isolation. In this paper, we present and discuss forms of participatory action that have recently been transposed into virtual public space and are primarily based on the sharing of images. We investigate the possibilities and valences of such an approach, both in general and at this specific historical moment.

Guerra, M., Ottolini, L. (2023). Participatory Actions in Virtual Spaces. The Role of Images in the Construction of Shared Spaces. In Proceedings of the 3rd International and Interdisciplinary Conference on Image and Imagination IMG 2021 (pp.919-925). Springer Cham [10.1007/978-3-031-25906-7-100].

Participatory Actions in Virtual Spaces. The Role of Images in the Construction of Shared Spaces

Guerra, M
;
2023

Abstract

Participatory actions in public spaces are practices of encounter with the potential to reinforce social ties and foster a renewed sense of belonging to places. They are well-established and widely practiced – both at the national level [1] and internationally [2, 3] – as modes of exploration [4] and participation that are located at the intersection between different disciplinary domains. The particular form of participatory action discussed here ideally takes place on the street, in squares, and on public ground, via interventions that are often temporary in nature and involve the transformation, but even more fundamentally the re-appropriation, of collective space. The advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, among its numerous repercussions, has also made it difficult if not impossible to carry out such forms of participation in person and on public ground. It has thus become necessary to modify and reformulate the ways in which participatory action is implemented, so as to continue harnessing its communicative power, and to identify new ways of fostering participation, at a time when it is needed more urgently than ever to counteract the risk of isolation. In this paper, we present and discuss forms of participatory action that have recently been transposed into virtual public space and are primarily based on the sharing of images. We investigate the possibilities and valences of such an approach, both in general and at this specific historical moment.
paper
Images; Participation; Participatory actions; Public Space; Virtual Public Space;
English
3rd International and Interdisciplinary Conference on Image and Imagination, IMG 2021 - 25 November 2021 through 26 November 2021
2021
Villa, D; Zuccoli, F
Proceedings of the 3rd International and Interdisciplinary Conference on Image and Imagination IMG 2021
9783031259050
6-apr-2023
2023
631
919
925
none
Guerra, M., Ottolini, L. (2023). Participatory Actions in Virtual Spaces. The Role of Images in the Construction of Shared Spaces. In Proceedings of the 3rd International and Interdisciplinary Conference on Image and Imagination IMG 2021 (pp.919-925). Springer Cham [10.1007/978-3-031-25906-7-100].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/413136
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