Alice Butler-Warke

University of Reading, UK

Title to be announced

Andrea Ballatore, King’s College London

Place and culture participate in a symbiotic exchange. Museums, festivals, libraries, and other cultural venues increasingly frame their work in terms of placemaking, participation, and local engagement. At the same time, places are continuously represented, compared, circulated, and imagined through pervasive digital media platforms, from Netflix series and travel vlogs, to search engines and large language models. Drawing on work carried out at the Cultural Geo-Analytics Lab at King’s College London, I will follow two complementary lines. Firstly, I will discuss how cultural and creative institutions influence place identities, attachments, perceptions, and economies, shaping highly uneven geographies between central hubs and vast peripheries. Then, I will turn to cultural representations of place in media, considering how places are depicted, ranked, and retrieved across platforms. Case studies from place ratings and search technologies illustrate how these dynamic, biased, and emergent media representations are essential in the construction (and contestation) of images of places at all scales, from entire continents to individual streets and cafés we frequent in our daily lives.

Andrea Ballatore (he/him) is Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) in Cultural Data Science at the Department of Digital Humanities at King’s College London, where he directs the Cultural Geo-Analytics Lab. His research develops and applies data science and GeoAI methods to investigate cultural dynamics in domains such as the creative and cultural industries, GLAM (galleries, libraries, archives, and museums), human geography, and war studies. His work has received funding from UKRI, Ordnance Survey UK, and Facebook Research. He is a strand co-lead on the £10m Leverhulme Centre for Research on Slavery in War.

Andrea Ballatore