Stratified Citizens: Conceptualizing Civic Capital in Mediatized Societies

While there are many ways to understand citizenship in terms of what constituents (should) do, think, feel, and say, there is a felt absence of a perspective that factors in the social reasons for how people enact citizenship and the role of media in enacting such forms of citizenship. Based on a re...

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Main Authors: Morten Fischer Sivertsen, Jannie Møller Hartley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2023-07-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051231190037
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author Morten Fischer Sivertsen
Jannie Møller Hartley
author_facet Morten Fischer Sivertsen
Jannie Møller Hartley
author_sort Morten Fischer Sivertsen
collection DOAJ
description While there are many ways to understand citizenship in terms of what constituents (should) do, think, feel, and say, there is a felt absence of a perspective that factors in the social reasons for how people enact citizenship and the role of media in enacting such forms of citizenship. Based on a review of key studies of citizenship in audience research and political science, this study introduces a Bourdieusian perspective to examine citizenship in mediatized societies. We argue for two main advantages to this approach. First, it cuts across scholarly silos and scrutinizes the civic habitus of people as it unfolds across both mediated and non-mediated life. Citizenship is thus seen as a complex interplay of online and offline practices that vary for agents across the social space. Second, this approach is attentive to dimensions of social inequality and power, emphasizing how the many citizenship practices in the modern era are situated in a vertically stratified social world with a distinct symbolic order. Linking this to the concepts of symbolic power and dominance, we develop the notion of civic capital to illuminate how certain forms of citizenship practices, mostly those available to the affluent strata, are elevated as correct expressions of legitimate citizenship, whereas others are frowned upon.
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spelling doaj.art-bbc6965c81ad498a98872091943961732023-08-01T07:03:36ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512023-07-01910.1177/20563051231190037Stratified Citizens: Conceptualizing Civic Capital in Mediatized SocietiesMorten Fischer SivertsenJannie Møller HartleyWhile there are many ways to understand citizenship in terms of what constituents (should) do, think, feel, and say, there is a felt absence of a perspective that factors in the social reasons for how people enact citizenship and the role of media in enacting such forms of citizenship. Based on a review of key studies of citizenship in audience research and political science, this study introduces a Bourdieusian perspective to examine citizenship in mediatized societies. We argue for two main advantages to this approach. First, it cuts across scholarly silos and scrutinizes the civic habitus of people as it unfolds across both mediated and non-mediated life. Citizenship is thus seen as a complex interplay of online and offline practices that vary for agents across the social space. Second, this approach is attentive to dimensions of social inequality and power, emphasizing how the many citizenship practices in the modern era are situated in a vertically stratified social world with a distinct symbolic order. Linking this to the concepts of symbolic power and dominance, we develop the notion of civic capital to illuminate how certain forms of citizenship practices, mostly those available to the affluent strata, are elevated as correct expressions of legitimate citizenship, whereas others are frowned upon.https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051231190037
spellingShingle Morten Fischer Sivertsen
Jannie Møller Hartley
Stratified Citizens: Conceptualizing Civic Capital in Mediatized Societies
Social Media + Society
title Stratified Citizens: Conceptualizing Civic Capital in Mediatized Societies
title_full Stratified Citizens: Conceptualizing Civic Capital in Mediatized Societies
title_fullStr Stratified Citizens: Conceptualizing Civic Capital in Mediatized Societies
title_full_unstemmed Stratified Citizens: Conceptualizing Civic Capital in Mediatized Societies
title_short Stratified Citizens: Conceptualizing Civic Capital in Mediatized Societies
title_sort stratified citizens conceptualizing civic capital in mediatized societies
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051231190037
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