New Right Metapolitics and the Algorithmic Activism of Schild & Vrienden

Digital media play an important role in the contemporary rise in visibility of New Right and far-right activist groups online, offline, and in the mainstream media. This visibility has boosted their online and offline mobilization power. Through a live digital ethnographic analysis of the rise of Sc...

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Main Author: Ico Maly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-06-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305119856700
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spelling doaj-71a8912d74744ffa81ee143eabcea4192020-11-25T03:45:17ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512019-06-01510.1177/2056305119856700New Right Metapolitics and the Algorithmic Activism of Schild & VriendenIco MalyDigital media play an important role in the contemporary rise in visibility of New Right and far-right activist groups online, offline, and in the mainstream media. This visibility has boosted their online and offline mobilization power. Through a live digital ethnographic analysis of the rise of Schild & Vrienden, a recent Flemish far-right activist movement, I will argue that we should understand their online and offline activism as part of a “metapolitical battle” exploiting the affordances of digital media in a hybrid media system. Schild & Vrienden, just like most contemporary New Right movements, draws ideological and strategic inspiration from “ La Nouvelle Droite ,” the French far-right school of thought. Following their lead, these activists focus first and foremost on the circulation and the normalization of ideas: the discursive or metapolitical battle for hegemony. Digital media like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube prove to be ideal platforms for that metapolitical battle enabling them to gain considerable discursive power in a hybrid media system. This article argues that the distribution of New Right content on these platforms presupposes digital literacy and algorithmic activism. “Algorithmic activists” are defined as activists who use (theoretical or practical) knowledge about the relative weight certain signals have within the proceduralized choices the algorithms of the media platforms make as proxies of human judgment, to reach their (meta)political goals. In this sense, “algorithmic activism” contributes to spreading their message by interacting with the post to trigger the algorithms of the medium, so that they boost the popularity rankings.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305119856700
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ico Maly
spellingShingle Ico Maly
New Right Metapolitics and the Algorithmic Activism of Schild & Vrienden
Social Media + Society
author_facet Ico Maly
author_sort Ico Maly
title New Right Metapolitics and the Algorithmic Activism of Schild & Vrienden
title_short New Right Metapolitics and the Algorithmic Activism of Schild & Vrienden
title_full New Right Metapolitics and the Algorithmic Activism of Schild & Vrienden
title_fullStr New Right Metapolitics and the Algorithmic Activism of Schild & Vrienden
title_full_unstemmed New Right Metapolitics and the Algorithmic Activism of Schild & Vrienden
title_sort new right metapolitics and the algorithmic activism of schild & vrienden
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Digital media play an important role in the contemporary rise in visibility of New Right and far-right activist groups online, offline, and in the mainstream media. This visibility has boosted their online and offline mobilization power. Through a live digital ethnographic analysis of the rise of Schild & Vrienden, a recent Flemish far-right activist movement, I will argue that we should understand their online and offline activism as part of a “metapolitical battle” exploiting the affordances of digital media in a hybrid media system. Schild & Vrienden, just like most contemporary New Right movements, draws ideological and strategic inspiration from “ La Nouvelle Droite ,” the French far-right school of thought. Following their lead, these activists focus first and foremost on the circulation and the normalization of ideas: the discursive or metapolitical battle for hegemony. Digital media like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube prove to be ideal platforms for that metapolitical battle enabling them to gain considerable discursive power in a hybrid media system. This article argues that the distribution of New Right content on these platforms presupposes digital literacy and algorithmic activism. “Algorithmic activists” are defined as activists who use (theoretical or practical) knowledge about the relative weight certain signals have within the proceduralized choices the algorithms of the media platforms make as proxies of human judgment, to reach their (meta)political goals. In this sense, “algorithmic activism” contributes to spreading their message by interacting with the post to trigger the algorithms of the medium, so that they boost the popularity rankings.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305119856700
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