Staff Profile
Dr Graeme Mearns
Lecturer, Media and Cultural Studies
- Telephone: +44 (0)191 208 4367
- Address: Media, Culture and Heritage
Room 2.12 Armstrong Building
School of Arts and Cultures
Newcastle University
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 7RU, UK
Introduction
I am a human geographer who joined Media, Culture and Heritage (MCH) in 2020 following a series of research positions that began with post-doctoral appointments in SiDE (link). More recently, I worked from within a base in Geography, Politics and Sociology on ‘Contested Spaces of Diversity’, a project led by Peter Hopkins that was designed to support understanding of the spatial experiences of university students and staff according to one or more attribute(s) protected by the Equality Act.
I completed my PhD in urban and cultural geography a decade ago. It was during this time that my scholarly interests in sexuality, queer geographies and digital media were sparked but I have always been fascinated by the travel of ideas and imagery between people and places. The rapid uptake of mobile technologies only strengthened a concern with such movements apparent in digital culture. Most of my academic work, so far, has been geared towards understanding how – often routinised – digital media can have both positive and negative effects on human and spatial relations which I tend to look at through attention to different geographical sites and scales; be it that of the body, city, region or global perspective for example.
I follow feminist and queer methodological and epistemological stances quite closely and try to keep up to date with a growing variety of computational tools, techniques and approaches that can now be used to do research in the humanities and social sciences.
'Contested Spaces of Diversity', REA Fellowship
The aim of the Contested Spaces of Diversity project is to investigate the experiences of higher education among students and staff who occupy one or more attribute(s) protected by the Equality Act (2010). The project adopts a qualitative approach and has so far involved a mix of semi-structured interviews and focus groups to begin understanding different perceptions and realities of studying and/or working in the varied spaces of teaching and learning, research, administration and conviviality which compose campus life. Data captured from different groups of students and staff will be examined relationally, whilst the feminist approach of intersectionality provides its theoretical anchor. It is hoped that findings raised by the project will inform equality, diversity and inclusion agendas at the university over time through iterative communication with the Director of Diversity, Faculty Directors and Equality and Diversity Leads. The project will allow insight to be shared with other geographers and scholars of other disciplines, especially those working to build the interdisciplinary field of Critical University Studies.
Other research
My PhD investigated experiences of gay, bisexual and queer-identifying men in Germany who use online social-sexual networking services to meet others, showing how user-generated content (personal profiles, photos, videos) can be produced by people in ways that challenge rigid configurations of identity and how this manifests spatially to inclusionary and exclusionary effects. During SiDE, I attempted to build on my doctorate in three ways. Firstly, and through working with arts-based scholars and practitioners at Newcastle's CultureLab, by rethinking the concept of 'community' in light of the ways in which digital technologies can be re-appropriated creatively, often in unassuming or 'vernacular' ways. Secondly, by understanding the proficiencies of young people with Facebook, YouTube and other social media for positive impacts on non-digital skills. Thirdly, by extending attention from volunteered, user-generated content to 'ambient' data: information made public online – often unwittingly – via mobile technologies such as the smartphone.
Following a successful contribution to the ESRC proposal 'Social Media Analysis for Social Geography' (SoMAG), I worked with colleagues in GPS and the School of Computing to determine the relevance of 'geosocial' media data for understanding human behaviours at both local and global scales. This involved using the data analytics tools of the Digital Institute to perform network and thematic analyses on 'geo-tagged tweets' mentioning the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (IDAHOT). I was fortunate to work particularly closely with Dr. Rebecca Simmonds who developed the Antares tool as part of her PhD before moving to industry. This relationship aided understanding of geographical patterns in support and opposition to the IDAHOT campaign (as articulated via Twitter) which works to bolster the equal rights of gender and sexual minorities. As part of this collaboration, Prof. Simon Woods (PEALS) also helped me to address the ethical challenges raised by utilising geosocial media data in potentially sensitive research on sexuality. Several of these issues are potent in light of the growing marketplace surrounding 'big data' and the masses of information most of us now make available online.
I am currently building a suite of research, teaching and engagement activity that will allow me to explore the 'data intensive turn' in the contexts of sexuality and location-based networking applications popularised in recent years. 'Apps' like Tinder, FindHrr and Grindr matter as they shape the ways in which we interact and meet one another, conduct and fail to conduct relationships and what it means to be 'single' or 'coupled' whilst giving way to possibilities for relationships that extend beyond traditional categories. The uses of these tools can be incredibly positive. For example, aiding communication in transnational activist networks, offering new channels for sexual health promotion or simply allowing people to meet in places where they might have otherwise been isolated. However, dating and sexual networking services can also exacerbate stereotypes, maintaining, for example, racial, bodily and/or class-based prejudices that inhibit social inclusion and equal life chances. The policing of same-sex sexual activity by governments in countries which monitor even mundane online communications networks like Twitter provides just one example of how privacy and security incursions can come to have real-world effects on individual lives. Recognising that media reportage around services like Tinder is often bound up with moral judgement of 'hook-ups' many people enjoy through using geosocial media, my research is sex-positive, aiming to contribute to safer use cultures by working between the social and computing sciences, with industry and community groups in the domains of health, leisure and activism.
I lead or teach on a number of different modules offered to students from within Media, Culture and Heritage, including:
MCH1023 Introduction to Media Studies
MCH1026 Introduction to Social and Cultural Studies
MCH2069 Research Methods
MCH3072 and MCH3073 Research Dissertation
MCH8057 Media Analysis
I have also supervised many postgraduate taught students for MCH8199 or MCH8299 and contribute to Newcastle University's PARTNERS programme which led Clifton Evers. I have previously contributed to teaching on GEO2225 Citizenship in a Global City during my time as a researcher in GPS which was led by module leader Michael Richardson.
In Semester 2 2023-24 I will be teaching mostly on Research Methods and students from this module, together with personal tutees, are welcome to get in contact for an appointment in student consultation hours. In Semester 2 these hours are Wednesdays 1-3pm and Thursdays 12-2pm (during teaching weeks only). Please email in advance to confirm a time where possible.
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Articles
- Bonner-Thompson C, Mearns GW, Hopkins P. Transgender negotiations of precarity: contested spaces of higher education. The Geographical Journal 2021, 187(3), 227-239.
- Mearns GW, Bonner-Thompson C, Hopkins P. Trans experiences of a university campus in northern England. Area 2020, 52(3), 488-494.
- Mearns GW. Queer geographies of spatial media. Geography Compass 2020, 14(3), e12481.
- Mearns GW, Richardson R, Robson E. Enacting the internet and social media on the public sector's frontline. New Technology, Work and Employment 2015, 30(3), 190-208.
- Mearns G, Simmonds R, Richardson R, Turner M, Watson P, Missier P. Tweet My Street: A Cross-Disciplinary Collaboration for the Analysis of Local Twitter Data. Future Internet 2014, 6, 378-396.
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Book Chapters
- Mearns GW, Bonner-Thompson C. Sexualities. In: Newcastle Social Geographies Collective, ed. Social Geographies: An Introduction. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield, 2020.
- Pain R, Hopkins P. Researching Social Geographies. In: Newcastle Social Geographies Collective, ed. Social Geographies: An Introduction. London: Rowman and Littlefield, 2020.
- Bonner-Thompson C, Mearns GW, Boussalem A, Ridley G. From order to chaos: geographies of sexualities. In: A. Datta, P. Hopkins, L. Johnston, E. Olson and J.M. Silva, ed. Routledge Handbook of Genders and Feminist Geographies. London and New York: Routledge, 2020, pp.27-36.
- Mearns GW, Bonner-Thompson C. Digital. In: Newcastle Social Geographies Collective, ed. Social Geographies: An Introduction. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield, 2020.
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Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstracts)
- Mearns G, Simmonds R, Richardson R, Missier P, Watson P. Tweet my street: utilising big data to understand local needs in the information society. In: World Social Science Forum. 2014, Montreal, Canada.
- Mearns GW, Simmonds R. Mapping conversations about the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia using the 'Tweet My Street' social media analytics tool. In: 5th Digital Economy All Hands Meeting (DE2014). 2014, London, UK: Imperial College London.
- Simmonds R, Watson P, Mearns G, Richardson R, Missier P, Turner M. Tweet my street: a cross-disciplinary collaboration for the analysis of local Twitter data. In: IEEE Big Data 2015. 2013, Santa Clara, CA, USA.
- Mearns G, Richardson R. The affordances of social media for inclusive urban communities and the need for 'multi-scalar' approaches. In: 3rd RCUK Digital Economy All Hands Meeting. 2012, Aberdeen, UK.
- Gaye L, Bitton J, Cavaco A, Jones B, Tanaka A, Mearns GW, Richardson R. Creative uses of ICT in connected communities: a scoping study. In: RCUK Digital Economy All Hands Conference 2011. 2011, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
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Edited Book
- Hopkins P, Newcastle Social Geographies Collective, Pain R, Shaw R, Gao Q, Bonnett A, Jones C, Richardson M, Rzedzian S, Benwell MC, Lin W, McAreavey R, Stenning A, Blazek M, Pande R, Najib K, Finlay R, Nayak A, Ridley G, Mearns G, Bonner-Thompson C, McLaughlin J, Boussalem A, Iqbal N, Heslop J, Jarvis H, Burrows R, Bambra C, Copeland A, Tate S, Campbell E, Thompson M, James A, Raynor R, Cunningham N, Powells G, Herbert J, Hocknell S, ed. Social Geographies: An Introduction. London, UK: Rowman and Littlefield, 2021.
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Reports
- Hopkins P, Mearns GW. The experiences of students and staff with one or more disability. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Newcastle University, 2020.
- Speed F, McCombe K, Mearns G, Chedgzoy K. Supporting Sanctuary Students and Staff: Understanding the needs of students and staff from refugee and asylum-seeker backgrounds. Newcastle University, 2020.
- Hopkins P, Mearns GW, Bonner-Thompson C. LGBTQ+ experiences of a university campus. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Newcastle University, 2019.
- Hopkins P, Iqbal N, Mearns G, Thompson M. Exploring the experiences of Black and Minority Ethnic students and staff at Newcastle University. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2019.
- Hopkins P, Iqbal N, Mearns G. Everyday sexism. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2019.
- Hopkins P, Mearns G, Bonner-Thompson C. Transgender experiences of Newcastle University. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2018.
- Mearns GW. Sexual networking and the geosocial web. Newcastle, UK: Newcastle University, 2016.
- Robson L, Richardson R, Mearns GW. Net Assets: Harnessing digital technologies to engage young people in North East England. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Newcastle University, 2013. Research Reports: Centre for Urban and Regional Development Studies.
- Mearns GW, Richardson R, Abbott A, Robson L. Social inclusion: investigating the affordances and limitations of digital technologies. Newcastle upon Tyne: Newcastle University, 2011. Social Inclusion through the Digital Economy (SiDE) Working Papers.
- Bitton J, Cavaco A, Gaye L, Jones B, Mearns G, Richardson R, Tanaka A. Situating community through creative technologies and practice. Swindon: Arts and Humanities Research Council, UK, 2011. Research Council Scoping Study.