Through a white lens: Black victimhood, visibility, and whiteness in the Black Lives Matter movement on TikTok

被引:25
|
作者
Krutrok, Moa Eriksson [1 ]
Akerlund, Mathilda [1 ]
机构
[1] Umea Univ, Dept Culture & Media Studies, Humanities Bldg,Biblioteksgrand 3, S-90187 Umea, Sweden
关键词
Critical victimology; Social movements studies; TikTok; Imagined audiences; Black Lives Matter; POLICE VIOLENCE; TWITTER; MEDIA; NEWS; RACE;
D O I
10.1080/1369118X.2022.2065211
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
In this paper, we explore how highly visible users in the context of #BlackLivesMatter on TikTok shape the narrative around Black victims of police brutality, the understanding of these narratives by others, and the potential consequences of these portrayals for the movement at large. To examine these dimensions, we analysed the 100 most circulated TikTok videos and associated comments depicting victims of police brutality using the #BlackLivesMatter hashtag through multimodal critical discourse analysis. We identified how users attempted to increase visibility of their content, and how this was supported or criticised by commenters depending on the perceived motives of these efforts. Furthermore, we showcased how influencers raised awareness of the movement with little personal effort or risk, sometimes appearing to leverage the movement for self-exposure. Our analysis showed that many of the most liked videos were made by white content creators who, in their videos, seemed to be addressing an imagined white audience. While these efforts portrayed the movement favourably, the content creators remain outsiders who have not themselves been in harm's way of police brutality. While there were exceptions that promoted the perspectives of marginalised communities, and while the white narratives were consistently supportive of the movement, they also work to displace focus on racial (in)justice away from those directly affected by it, that is, away from Black people's own experiences of police brutality. We discuss these findings in relation to questions about digital representations of Black victimhood, digital visibility and practices of whiteness, on TikTok and beyond.
引用
收藏
页码:1996 / 2014
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Activism Through Fandom for the Black Lives Matter Movement
    Johnson, Taylar
    Li, Manyu
    Mitchell, Cheyane
    PSYCHOLOGY OF POPULAR MEDIA, 2024, 13 (03) : 382 - 394
  • [2] Letters for Black Lives: Co-ethnic Mobilization and Support for the Black Lives Matter Movement
    Arora, Maneesh
    Stout, Christopher T.
    POLITICAL RESEARCH QUARTERLY, 2019, 72 (02) : 389 - 402
  • [3] Red States and Black Lives: Applying the Racial Threat Hypothesis to the Black Lives Matter Movement
    Updegrove, Alexander H.
    Cooper, Maisha N.
    Orrick, Erin A.
    Piquero, Alex R.
    JUSTICE QUARTERLY, 2020, 37 (01) : 85 - 108
  • [4] Exposure to anti-Black Lives Matter movement and obesity of the Black population
    Park, Hyun Joon
    Francisco, Sara Chari
    Pang, M. Rosemary
    Peng, Lulu
    Chi, Guangqing
    SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2023, 316
  • [5] More than a black and white issue: ethnic identity, social dominance orientation, and support for the black lives matter movement
    Holt, Lanier Frush
    Sweitzer, Matthew D.
    SELF AND IDENTITY, 2020, 19 (01) : 16 - 31
  • [6] Spectacular whiteness: The tactics and mediation of white protests for Black Lives
    Vilanova, John
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CULTURAL STUDIES, 2025, 28 (02) : 408 - 424
  • [7] Black Lives Matter and Catholic Whiteness: A Tale of Two Performances
    Jaycox, Michael P.
    HORIZONS, 2017, 44 (02) : 306 - 341
  • [8] The Transnationalism of the Black Lives Matter Movement: Decolonization and Mapping Black Geographies in Sydney, Australia
    Barwick, Daniel
    Nayak, Anoop
    ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF GEOGRAPHERS, 2024, 114 (07) : 1587 - 1603
  • [9] Black Lives Matter, Black Stories Matter, Black Voices Matter: Black Lives Matter Protests, COVID-19, and Streaming Services
    Diaz, Salena
    Pullen, Carly
    Iannone, Nicole
    PSYCHOLOGY OF POPULAR MEDIA, 2022, 11 (03) : 285 - 291
  • [10] The Framing of Race: Trayvon Martin and the Black Lives Matter Movement
    Lane, Kimberly
    Williams, Yaschica
    Hunt, Andrea N.
    Paulk, Amber
    JOURNAL OF BLACK STUDIES, 2020, 51 (08) : 790 - 812