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34. Fornäs (2002a: 326-31).
35. Jeancolas (2001: 35). See also Friedberg (1993) for a discussion of relationships between film,
consumption and urban life.
36. Canclini (1995/2001: 110f, 122), Fuller (2004), Corbett (2001: 26).
37. Sture Johansson, according to DN På stan (Dagens Nyheter’s weekend entertainment supplement)
28 December 2001. Niklas Wahllöf wrote a review of all of Stockholm’s suburban cinemas in DN
På stan, 1 March 2002.
38. Fuller (2004), Erickson (2000).
39. Couldry (2000a: 65ff); see also Lash and Urry (1994: 215f).
40. Cf. Lash and Urry (1994: 307).
41. Appadurai (1996).
42. Hannerz (2001).
43. Gemzöe (2004a).
44. Kaijser (2002).
45. Kaijser (2002: 187); Goffman (1959/1972).
46. Camauër (2002).
47. Camauër (2002: 71).
48. These periodicals accounted for the greater part of the library’s media budget of two million
crowns, or 10 per cent of the library’s total budget. The library’s selection is substantially broader
than that of the shopping centre’s newsagents. At the time of our study, Polish and Ethiopian news-
papers were not available in the newsagents (Camauër 2002: 66f).
49. Camauër (2002: 72ff).
50. The ‘local’/‘cosmopolitan’ binary derives from Merton (1968) and has been widely used, for
instance by Thomson and Taylor (2005). See also how Morley (2001) discusses how media
consumption relates to space, place and identity.
51. Ricoeur (2000/2004: 153).
52. Massey (2005: 183f).
53. Massey (2005: 9ff). In a similar vein, Amin and Thrift (2002: 30) argue that places are ‘moments
of encounter’, ‘variable events; twists and fluxes of interrelation’.
54. This was highlighted in Chapter 1, with reference to Stallybrass and White (1986).
CHAPTER 10 COMMUNICATIVE POWER
1. Gustavsson (2001: 59ff).
2. Habermas (1981/1984: 285).
3. Bjurström (2001a: 120).
4. Livingstone (2005a: 20) mentions how space ‘turns out to be ambiguous or shifting depending on
its use’, specifically in terms of the increasingly blurred public/private divide.
5. See also Jackson (1998).
6. USK (2000: 8).
7. ‘Mediatheques’ (or ‘mediateques’) are public places where people can interact with a wide range of
different media. The term is formed in parallel to ‘bibliotheques’, i.e. the term for libraries in many
non-English European languages (French, German, Scandinavian, etc.).
8. Collin (2003).