Description
Book SynopsisOffering a much-needed global perspective on the "dark side" of the internet, Digital Hate is a timely and critical look at the raging debates around online media's failed promises.
Trade Review"Timely, original, and powerful, this anthology is packed with new insights about digital media and political cultures. Contributors comprise an interdisciplinary and international group of scholars grounded predominantly in anthropology and media studies. Their diverse studies in the global north and south approach extreme speech online as a cultural practice situated within wider social struggles. The collection reveals the dynamics of exclusionary politics that paradoxically thrive in the age of digital connectivity."—Victoria Bernal, author of Nation as Network: Diaspora, Cyberspace, and Citizenship, Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Irvine
"This superb collection contains a number of stimulating contributions by authors from around the world. The introduction lays out the book's unique intellectual re-reading of online extreme speech, civility, and rationality. It offers insightful and innovative ways of understanding these issues from decolonial and ethnographically grounded approaches. This is the only book to connect history, colonial formations, and coloniality in the study of extreme speech in the digital age."—Sarah Chiumbu, Associate Professor, Department of Communication & Media, University of Johannesburg
"How is the term 'hate speech' mobilized to further specific political ends, so deepening rather than alleviating inequalities in the public domain? This is the question that this highly sophisticated collection of essays addresses, drawing on a wide range of cases from Kenya to Chile, the Philippines to Germany. These deeply contextualized studies constitute a huge step forward in our understanding of the cultural and technological underpinnings of extreme speech on a global scale—a landmark study."—Nick Couldry, London School of Economics and Political Science
Table of ContentsHate Cultures in the Digital Age: The Global Conjuncture of Extreme Speech, by Sahana Udupa, Iginio Gagliardone, and Peter Hervik
Part One: Extreme Speech as a Critique: Power and Agonism
1. There's no such thing as hate speech and it's a good thing, too, by David Boromisza-Habashi
2. The political trolling industry in Duterte's Philippines: Everyday work arrangements of disinformation and extreme speech, by Jonathan Corpus Ong
3. It is Incivility, not hate speech: Application of Laclau and Mouffe's discourse theory to analysis of non-anthropocentric agency, by David Katiambo
4. The moral economy of extreme speech: Resentment and anger in Indian minority politics, by Max Kramer
Part Two: Colloquialization of Exclusion
5. Us and (((them))): Extreme memes and anti-Semitism on 4Chan, by Marc Tuters and Sal Hagen
6. Nationalism in the digital age: Fun as a metapractice of extreme speech, by Sahana Udupa
7. A presidential archive of lies: Racism, Twitter, and a history of the present, by Carole McGranahan
8. Racialization, racism and anti-racism in Danish social media platforms, by Peter Hervik
9. Follow the memes: On the construction of far-right identities online, by Amy C. Mack
10. The politics of Muhei: Ethnic humor and Islamophobia on Chinese social media, by Gabriele de Seta
11. Writing on the walls: Discourses on Bolivian immigrants in Chilean meme humor, by Nell Haynes
Part Three: Organization and Disorganization
12. Blasphemy accusations as extreme speech acts in Pakistan, by Jürgen Schaflechner
13. Localized hatred: The importance of physical spaces within the German far-right online counterpublic on Facebook, by Jonas Kaiser
14. "Motherhood" revisited: Pushing boundaries in Indonesia's online discourse, by Indah S. Pratidina
15. Networks of political trolling in Turkey after the consolidation of power under the Presidency, by Erkan Saka
Contributors' Biographies
Index