Feminist Digilante Responses to a Slut-Shaming on Facebook

This article examines feminist digilantism in response to the “slut-shaming” of an Australian woman on Facebook in 2015. The activism is used to highlight the nature and significance of the feminist pushback against the worsening problem of cyber violence against women and girls (cyber VAWG). This a...

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Main Author: Emma A. Jane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-05-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305117705996
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spelling doaj-d37dcf0469a8405f90705330cfa84dfa2020-11-25T03:40:29ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512017-05-01310.1177/2056305117705996Feminist Digilante Responses to a Slut-Shaming on FacebookEmma A. JaneThis article examines feminist digilantism in response to the “slut-shaming” of an Australian woman on Facebook in 2015. The activism is used to highlight the nature and significance of the feminist pushback against the worsening problem of cyber violence against women and girls (cyber VAWG). This article builds on my previous research into feminist digilantism and is part of a much larger, mixed-methods, multi-modal study into gendered cyberhate. It uses approaches from Internet historiography, ethnography, and netnography, alongside data drawn from qualitative interviews. Sufficient evidence is available to support the broad argument that the feminist digilantism involved in the case study under analysis was efficacious as well as ethically justified given the dearth of institutional interventions. That said, I demonstrate that while such activism has benefits, it also has risks and disadvantages, and raises ethical issues. This critique of digilantism is not intended as yet another type of victim blaming which suggests the activist responses of cyberhate targets are flawed. Instead, my case is that appraising the efficacy and ethics of such forms of extrajudicial activism should take place within a framing acknowledging that these actions are primarily diagnostic of rather than a solution to cyber VAWG. As such, the increasing prevalence and strength of feminist digilantism lends further support to the case that gendered cyberhate is a problem demanding urgent and multifaceted intervention.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305117705996
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emma A. Jane
spellingShingle Emma A. Jane
Feminist Digilante Responses to a Slut-Shaming on Facebook
Social Media + Society
author_facet Emma A. Jane
author_sort Emma A. Jane
title Feminist Digilante Responses to a Slut-Shaming on Facebook
title_short Feminist Digilante Responses to a Slut-Shaming on Facebook
title_full Feminist Digilante Responses to a Slut-Shaming on Facebook
title_fullStr Feminist Digilante Responses to a Slut-Shaming on Facebook
title_full_unstemmed Feminist Digilante Responses to a Slut-Shaming on Facebook
title_sort feminist digilante responses to a slut-shaming on facebook
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2017-05-01
description This article examines feminist digilantism in response to the “slut-shaming” of an Australian woman on Facebook in 2015. The activism is used to highlight the nature and significance of the feminist pushback against the worsening problem of cyber violence against women and girls (cyber VAWG). This article builds on my previous research into feminist digilantism and is part of a much larger, mixed-methods, multi-modal study into gendered cyberhate. It uses approaches from Internet historiography, ethnography, and netnography, alongside data drawn from qualitative interviews. Sufficient evidence is available to support the broad argument that the feminist digilantism involved in the case study under analysis was efficacious as well as ethically justified given the dearth of institutional interventions. That said, I demonstrate that while such activism has benefits, it also has risks and disadvantages, and raises ethical issues. This critique of digilantism is not intended as yet another type of victim blaming which suggests the activist responses of cyberhate targets are flawed. Instead, my case is that appraising the efficacy and ethics of such forms of extrajudicial activism should take place within a framing acknowledging that these actions are primarily diagnostic of rather than a solution to cyber VAWG. As such, the increasing prevalence and strength of feminist digilantism lends further support to the case that gendered cyberhate is a problem demanding urgent and multifaceted intervention.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305117705996
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