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Social media conflict: platforms for racial vilification, or acts of provocation and citizenship?

Version 2 2024-06-17, 13:43
Version 1 2015-04-30, 15:16
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 13:43 authored by A Johns, Anthony McCosker
Although racism remains an issue for social media sites such as YouTube, this focus often overshadows the site’s productive capacity to generate ‘agonistic publics’ from which expressions of cultural citizenship and solidarity might emerge. This paper examines these issues through two case studies: the recent proliferation of mobile phone video recordings of racist rants on public transport, and racist interactions surrounding the performance of a Maori ‘flash mob’ haka in New Zealand that was recorded and uploaded to YouTube. We contrast these incidents as they are played out primarily through social media, with the case of Australian Football League player Adam Goodes and the broadcast media reaction to a racial slur aimed against him by a crowd member during the AFL’s Indigenous Round. We discuss the prevalence of vitriolic exchange and racial bigotry, but also, and more importantly, the productive and equally aggressive defence of more inclusive and tolerant forms of cultural identification that play out across these different media forms. Drawing on theories of cultural citizenship along with the political theory of Chantal Mouffe, we point to the capacities of YouTube as ‘platform’, and to social media practices, in facilitating ground-up antiracism and generating dynamic, contested and confronting micropublics.

History

Journal

Communication, politics and culture

Volume

47

Pagination

44-54

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

1836-0645

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, RMIT Publishing

Issue

3

Publisher

RMIT Publishing