Physical and Digital Activism
Given the current events around the world as we fight to make society as a whole understand the wrongdoings against people of color and the police brutality that continues against black individuals, this week’s reading comes at a more accurate timing. James Alexander McVey and heather Suzanne Woods in their article, Anti-Racist Activism and the Transformational Principles of Hashtag Publics, analyzes the ways in which activists use the hashtag to participate and shape the rhetoric of social media platforms.
“Hashtags are discursively fungible, exchangeable, or flexible. They must be short enough to allow users to both cite the hashtag and insert their own commentary within Twitter’s 140-character limit (”Using Hashtags on Twitter”). Hashtags must be catchy, repeatable, and abstract enough to invite a huge number of tweets, while simultaneously being clear enough about their referent to ensure conversation remains focused on the topic.”
-McVey and Woods (2)
Using this article in order to analyze Lauri Goodling’s MOAR Digital Activism page shows that the use of hashtags is extremely important in order to try and become more involved or knowledgeable in a certain topic. Going through a hashtag opens a select topic and allows us to immerse ourselves within that specific topic and even have access to participate in the conversation. With Twitter’s hashtags, it is possible to link many conversations into a single category just by the clicking of that tag. Reflecting on current events, Twitter’s trending hashtags has been such a fast-paced list that chances are the top hashtags change within every hour as people are taking to the digital platform to take a stand and express their voice amidst this pandemic concerns and those who are unable to physically participate in events of activism.
The Trolls and Haters of Media
With Twitter being accessible to all and giving users the power to amplify their voices, it is not surprising to see when trolls take advantage of the use of hashtags to try and make a voice louder.
“Just as #HandsUpDontShoot became a rallying cry for Ferguson protesters, #PantsUpDontLoot provided a means for the formation of right-wing, racist online publics in response to the Ferguson protests while simultaneously counteracting the narrative of police racism that emerged in the wake of Brown's killing.”
-McVey and Woods (4)
It is sickening to see that those will ill intent take these powerful hashtags and mutate them into their own interpretation intend on either mocking the initial message or throwing it back in user’s faces with a manipulated message in response. This is where it becomes dangerous, as these altered hashtags can even prey on those who have good intentions and unknowingly have their voice fall into the wrong hashtag because the negative one was a play on words of the original. It is a cheap and terrible tactic that unfortunately proves that there is much power in social media to both the good and bad fight.
Thinking back to the idea of incorporating social media platform into the classroom as an academic resource made available to students, it makes one wonder if social media is a realm too delicate to touch in the classroom? I, for one believe that there is power in discomfort and that in order to understand the situation of society, that we need to get used to being uncomfortable or at least feel a need to do something to stop the cause of that feeling. This belief obviously varies according to what classroom level being taught, but as my classroom concept focuses on high school seniors and first year composition students, I feel it appropriate for student to have access to this as they are more than likely already aware of the power of these platform at that point in their lives and may even be part of the voices standing up for what they believe in. Unfortunately these trolls that manipulate the system for their negative agenda will likely not stop so long as there is something they disagree with, but being aware of this and understand how the hashtag works in order to create a space of rhetorical context can help lessen that negative power and amplify the right voices.













