
Professor Rebecca Coleman
BSoc, MA, PhD
Current positions
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Research interests
Rebecca’s research crosses sociology, media and cultural studies and feminist theory, and she has particular interests in digital media and cultures; futures and presents; bodies, affect and new materialisms; and inventive methodologies. She is Professor in the Bristol Digital Futures Institute (BDFI), the ESRC Centre for Sociodigital Futures (CenSoF) and the School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies (SPAIS). She has previously worked in the Sociology Departments at Goldsmiths, University of London and Lancaster University.
From 2023-2025 she was Researcher in Residence at Knowle West Media Centre, an arts centre and charity based in south Bristol that makes fairer futures through art, tech and care (supported by an AHRC Knowledge Exchange Placement, 2023-2024). During that time, she was involved in different initiatives related to community technology and digital futures, including an exhibition, Foundations for the Future (2025). She has been a Visiting Professor at the University of Tampere (2018) and the Collaborative Research Centre on Affective Societies, Freie University Berlin (2024).
She is currently working on collaborative projects related to imagining and making better digital futures and writing a book that draws on empirical research on digital media, temporality and feeling (supported by a Leverhulme Research Fellowship, 2018-19).
Recent research includes a project on time and feeling during the Covid-19 pandemic which included co-commissioning a special directive with Mass Observation, ‘feel tanks’ with young people and an artist response to the research (supported by a British Academy Small Grant, 2021). This is part of a wider collaborative programme of research - A Day at a Time - on everyday experiences of time during and after the pandemic.
Rebecca has published widely. On media, culture and bodies, this includes Glitterworlds: The Future Politics of a Ubiquitous Thing (2020, Goldsmiths Press), ‘Mediating Presents’, a special issue of Media Theory (edited with Susanna Paasonen, 2020), Transforming Images: Screens, Affect, Futures (2012, Routledge) and The Becoming of Bodies: Girls, Images, Experience (2009, Manchester University Press).
On time and futures, this includes ‘Futures in Question: Theories, Methods, Practices’ a special issue of Sociological Review (edited with Richard Tutton, 2017), which emerged from the interdisciplinary ESRC Seminar Series on Austerity Futures: Imagining and Materialising the Future in an ‘Age of Austerity’ (2012-2014), which she led.
On interdisciplinary, creative methods, this includes a co-edited book, How to do social research with… (edited with Kat Jungnickel and Nirmal Puwar, 2024, Goldsmiths Press), which is an engaged guide to doing critical and creative social research with a range of unusual things. Other publications in this area include ‘Feminist New Materialist Practice’, a special issue of MAI (edited with Tara Page and Helen Palmer, 2019), which includes visual and practice work alongside written essays, and Deleuze and Research Methodologies (edited with Jessica Ringrose, 2013, Edinburgh University Press).
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Making Digital Futures with Community Tech - with Knowle West Media Centre
Principal Investigator
Description
This Knowledge Exchange Placement builds on Knowle West Media Centre's mission to make thriving neighbourhoods through art, tech and care, and especially their long-standing work on and with community tech.Managing organisational unit
School of Sociology, Politics and International StudiesDates
24/07/2023 to 20/12/2024
Feeling, Making and Imagining Time: Everyday Temporal Experiences in the Covid-19 Pandemic
Principal Investigator
Description
Supported by a British Academy Small Grant (SRG2021\211073), in collaboration with Mass Observation.
The research programme investigates people’s lived experiences of time during the unfolding Covid-19 pandemic in the UK. It…Managing organisational unit
School of Sociology, Politics and International StudiesDates
01/04/2021 to 31/12/2021
Mediating Presents: Producing ‘The Now’ in Contemporary Digital Culture
Principal Investigator
Description
How have digital media changed our experience of time? They are often described as a ‘real-time’, ‘live’, ‘always- on’ temporality – but are these the same thing? How can we…Managing organisational unit
School of Sociology, Politics and International StudiesDates
01/07/2018 to 31/03/2020
Publications
Recent publications
23/05/2025Present feelings, feeling present
The Sociological Review
How to do social research with....collaging
How to do social research with...
How to do social research with...: Introduction
How to do social research with...
Towards a minor sociology of futures
Journal of Sociology
How to do social research with...
How to do social research with...