av admin | jul 30, 2019 | Collecting, Nordiska museet, Social media, Social Media Photography
As a result of the research performed in the Collecting Social Photo project, Associate Professor Paula Uimonen, The Department of Social Anthropology, Stockholm University has recently published the article #MeToo in Sweden: Museum Collections, Digital Archiving and...
av Bente Jensen | apr 12, 2019 | Collecting, Social media, Social Media Photography
Comment on the implications of the recent closings of social media platforms and data delete In the last blogpost we reflected on the fact that social media platforms in some ways have become the new archives for (social) digital photography for numerous people and...
av Bente Jensen | mar 19, 2019 | Collecting, History, Memory, Social media, Social Media Photography
In this blogpost the Collecting Social Photo (CoSoPho) project team will share reflections about the development of social media and the possible consequences for collecting for archives and museums. During the recent years we have noticed a growing focus on memory...
av Paula Uimonen | nov 27, 2017 | Collecting, Instagram, Social media
By Paula Uimonen, Department of Social Anthropology, Stockholm University, 27 November 2017 Within a week of the start of the global #MeToo online campaign, manifestations were organized in 13 cities across Sweden on 22 October 2017, from Umeå in the north to Malmö in...
av admin | feb 22, 2017 | Research, Social media, Social Media Photography
My name is Lisa Ehlin and I hold a PhD in Fashion Studies at the Department of Media Studies at Stockholm University. In this project, I will primarily function as a researcher and an adviser, contextualising the project and finding relevant theoretical frameworks for...
av admin | sep 22, 2016 | Aalborg City Archives, Nordiska museet, Research, Social media, Stockholms läns museum, The Finnish Museum of Photography
First phase of the Collecting Social Photography project has ended and fortunately we (the partners in the project) have received funding to continue the work with social photography in archives and museums for another 3 ½ years. More about that in a future blog post....