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Dive into the research topics where Coppélie Cocq is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Coppélie Cocq.


Folklore | 2013

Anthropological Places, Digital Spaces, and Imaginary Scapes: Packaging a Digital Sámiland

Coppélie Cocq

This article, which focuses on the Sámi, the indigenous people of Fenno-Scandinavia, investigates the production of place in digital environments. Place-making practices are approached through the study of expressive culture. This article also discusses the consequences of these practices for linguistic and cultural revitalization and for the articulation of Sámi identity.


European Journal of Communication | 2017

Turning the inside out: Social media and the broadcasting of indigenous discourse:

Simon Lindgren; Coppélie Cocq

This article analyses what happens on social media (Twitter) when a local issue specific to a certain Indigenous group spreads out to a wider network of actors. We look closer at the process where emic (inside) discourses are enabled, through social media, to reach a broader audience and become part of translocal debates. In a case study of information sharing, network building and support on Twitter in relation to a series of Sámi anti-mining protests in 2013, we address questions about the dynamics, flows and process of Indigenous communication on Twitter. First, we analyse in what ways and to what extent the posts are used for inreach communication or outreach communication. Second, we analyse the role of tweets that contain links to web resources for broadcasting Indigenous concerns to a wider, more diverse audience. Finally, we assess how different types of actors interact in order to shape the circulation of content. Our analysis shows even though communication went beyond the core community, Sámi actors still appeared to own and control the discourse and agenda on the issue in social media. Obviously, online communities are not secluded communities. For geographically localized groups and for marginalized communities, the use of global social media does not only enable communication with actors in more distant groups and places; social media also makes visible common interests and goals on a global scale. The possibility of addressing multiple audiences at the same time increases the potential of reaching an audience outside one’s set of ‘followers’ or one’s tight-knit communities of like-minded people.


Archive | 2008

Revoicing Sámi narratives : north Sámi storytelling at the turn of the 20th century

Coppélie Cocq


Journal of American Folklore | 2015

Indigenous voices on the web : Folksonomies and Endangered Languages

Coppélie Cocq


Kulturella perspektiv - Svensk etnologisk tidskrift | 2014

Kampen om Gállok : Platsskapande och synliggörande

Coppélie Cocq


Oral Tradition | 2013

From the Árran to the Internet: Sami Storytelling in Digital Environments

Coppélie Cocq


Archive | 2016

Mobile Technology in Indigenous Landscapes

Coppélie Cocq


Narrative Works | 2016

Narrating Climate Change: Conventionalized Narratives in Concordance and Conflict

Daniel Andersson; Coppélie Cocq


Folklore | 2014

TradiTionalisaTion for reviTalisaTion: TradiTion as a concepT and pracTice in conTemporary sámi conTexTs

Coppélie Cocq


Archive | 2013

Savoirs traditionnels et traditions de recherche. Le folklore comme instrument politique et arme idéologique.

Coppélie Cocq

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