Crip Twitter and Utopic Feeling: How Disabled Twitter Users Reorganize Public Affects

Conceptually, online activism remains a divisive concept: detractors decry it as low-commitment “slacktivism,” and proponents argue that the Internet is a powerful platform for organizing. Particularly for disabled persons, the Internet provides new avenues for engagement and organizing work by allo...

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Main Author: Sohum Pal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cultural Studies Association 2019-12-01
Series:Lateral
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.25158/L8.2.7
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author Sohum Pal
author_facet Sohum Pal
author_sort Sohum Pal
collection DOAJ
description Conceptually, online activism remains a divisive concept: detractors decry it as low-commitment “slacktivism,” and proponents argue that the Internet is a powerful platform for organizing. Particularly for disabled persons, the Internet provides new avenues for engagement and organizing work by allowing disabled persons in disparate places to connect with each other. While the intersection of disability activism and online activism remains underexplored, existing literature remains anchored to the notion that disabled online activism’s greatest impact is in organizing physical protests and actions. This paper scrutinizes the actual work and impact of three disabled Twitter activists, and wages an argument based on how Twitter activists make other users feel. Particularly, this paper synthesizes affect theory with Althusser’s notion of “interpellation” and revises Michael Warner’s theory of “publics” to argue that such disabled Twitter activists and their followers mutually generate networks distinguished by shared feelings (affective networks, as this paper terms them), and that these networks are constantly being renegotiated and transforming the feelings of their members. The paper makes four key interventions: first, it writes against Michael Warner’s initial reluctance to include the Internet in his theory of publics, by arguing that Twitter followings model Warner’s publics. Second, it performs close readings to describe both how Twitter users’ writings generate affective networks and what activist impact these affective networks have. Third, it identifies and describes radical optimism and the utopic work of “demanding” as constituents of Twitter users’ affective networks. Finally, this paper examines and describes how affective networks shift with each tweet, and how such writings transform the feelings that constitute those affective networks. Arguing in part from my own subjectivity as a disabled Twitter user, I contend that Twitter enables disabled users to organize their feelings according to the feelings they want to have, and the feelings they think they ought to have.
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spelling doaj.art-f5841f181cf84b389f06e321ad6a33962022-12-22T00:19:38ZengCultural Studies AssociationLateral2469-40532019-12-018210.25158/L8.2.7https://csalateral.org/issue/8-2/crip-twitter-utopic-feeling-disabled-pal/Crip Twitter and Utopic Feeling: How Disabled Twitter Users Reorganize Public AffectsSohum PalConceptually, online activism remains a divisive concept: detractors decry it as low-commitment “slacktivism,” and proponents argue that the Internet is a powerful platform for organizing. Particularly for disabled persons, the Internet provides new avenues for engagement and organizing work by allowing disabled persons in disparate places to connect with each other. While the intersection of disability activism and online activism remains underexplored, existing literature remains anchored to the notion that disabled online activism’s greatest impact is in organizing physical protests and actions. This paper scrutinizes the actual work and impact of three disabled Twitter activists, and wages an argument based on how Twitter activists make other users feel. Particularly, this paper synthesizes affect theory with Althusser’s notion of “interpellation” and revises Michael Warner’s theory of “publics” to argue that such disabled Twitter activists and their followers mutually generate networks distinguished by shared feelings (affective networks, as this paper terms them), and that these networks are constantly being renegotiated and transforming the feelings of their members. The paper makes four key interventions: first, it writes against Michael Warner’s initial reluctance to include the Internet in his theory of publics, by arguing that Twitter followings model Warner’s publics. Second, it performs close readings to describe both how Twitter users’ writings generate affective networks and what activist impact these affective networks have. Third, it identifies and describes radical optimism and the utopic work of “demanding” as constituents of Twitter users’ affective networks. Finally, this paper examines and describes how affective networks shift with each tweet, and how such writings transform the feelings that constitute those affective networks. Arguing in part from my own subjectivity as a disabled Twitter user, I contend that Twitter enables disabled users to organize their feelings according to the feelings they want to have, and the feelings they think they ought to have.https://doi.org/10.25158/L8.2.7affectcripdisabilitydisability studiespublictwitterutopia
spellingShingle Sohum Pal
Crip Twitter and Utopic Feeling: How Disabled Twitter Users Reorganize Public Affects
Lateral
affect
crip
disability
disability studies
public
twitter
utopia
title Crip Twitter and Utopic Feeling: How Disabled Twitter Users Reorganize Public Affects
title_full Crip Twitter and Utopic Feeling: How Disabled Twitter Users Reorganize Public Affects
title_fullStr Crip Twitter and Utopic Feeling: How Disabled Twitter Users Reorganize Public Affects
title_full_unstemmed Crip Twitter and Utopic Feeling: How Disabled Twitter Users Reorganize Public Affects
title_short Crip Twitter and Utopic Feeling: How Disabled Twitter Users Reorganize Public Affects
title_sort crip twitter and utopic feeling how disabled twitter users reorganize public affects
topic affect
crip
disability
disability studies
public
twitter
utopia
url https://doi.org/10.25158/L8.2.7
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