User:Pleun/insp/transgression: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 46: Line 46:


Restrictions:
Restrictions:
* ONLINE culture wars
* '''ONLINE''' culture wars
*  
* Focus on 2015>2016>2017
* Focus on main events, actors, media,
 


== Main Sides==
== Main Sides==

Revision as of 17:04, 1 November 2017

Online Culture Wars

Mapping out the online culture wars, with the help of:

Notes:

  • While attempting to describe these groups, I notice the left-wing/feminist side has less specific groups/names. Plus a lot of names, like SJW, are coined by the "enemy".
  • If I create a dictionary and follow word origin and scrape its history online, could that give clues on how the ideology is shaped?
  • Is it possible to scrape a few forums and check when unknown words are created? Therefore following directly when, where and how the ideology is shaped?


Main interests

  • collective creation of an ideology online
  • from online echo chambers to actual political power
  • skewed reality in echo chambers
  • possible physicality of online spaces

Possible Questions of focus

  • How is offline politics influenced by the online culture war?
  • Can you break an online echo chamber by taking its ideology offline, leaving a physical trace?
  • How can you stimulate discussion (break online echo chamber) between sides?
  • How are language and image used in online culture to shape ideology?


Research Method

3 steps:

1. I first want to map out the broad scope by taking 3 main groups: Right-wing, Left-wing/feminist, Manosphere.
I will do this by:

  • text (short descriptions of ideology, bio's of actors, links between actors, online habitats)
  • gathering media:
  • creating a map

2. A case study. This case study will preferably be a Dutch branch of the online culture wars influencing Dutch politics, as I believe we need to rapidly grow more aware


Where is this interest coming from:

  • I was researching the online subculture of Vaporwave for a while when the culture got reappropriated and was involved in an online culture war, by the alt-right.


Restrictions:

  • ONLINE culture wars
  • Focus on 2015>2016>2017
  • Focus on main events, actors, media,


Main Sides

Right-wing

Habitat

  • 4Chan
  • Reddit

1. Alt-Light

Main Ideology:


Main Actors:


2. Alt-Right

Main Ideology:


Main Actors:

  • Steve Bannon

3. Neo-Fascism, Neo-Nazism, White Supremacists

Main Ideology:

Main Actors:

  • Richard Spencer

Dictionary

Leftwing

Habitat

  • Tumblr
  • Buzzfeed

1. 3rd wave Feminism

2. Gender Politics

#WOKE

Alt-Woke Manifesto: http://tripleampersand.org/alt-woke-manifesto/

Dictionary

Manosphere

“ These subcultures, between which there is often animosity, and some important political and philosophical difference, have become collectively referred to by some observers as ‘the Manosphere’. The term has been used to describe everything from progressive men’s issues activists dealing with real neglect of male health, suicide and unequal social services to the nastier corners of the Internet, filled with involuntary celibacy-obsessed, hate-filled, resentment-fueled cultures of quite chilling levels of misogyny.” Angela Nagle. Kill All Normies


1. MRA

Main Ideology: MRA (Men's Rights Activists)
Mostly older men
Reactionary: a reaction to feminism
Main Focus: alimony, perternaty fraud, men's issues regarding family

Key events, media, input:

Main Actors:

  • Paul Elam

Main Habitats:


2. MGTOW

Main Ideology:

Main Actors:

Main Habitats:

3. Neo Masc

Main Ideology:

Main Actors:

Main Habitats:

Dictionary

  • The Red Pill

00000

Influence of the online culture wars in Dutch politics
Transgression
Transgression in art: http://dissidentreality.com/articles/cinema-transgression-manifesto/
Transgression within the alt-right
Accelerationism