Abstract

With recent technology and social media, new forms of political activism have become widespread. Young people in particular, have been willing to embrace these new forms of activism. This paper examines new trends in digital activism through qualitative observations of Twitter and Tiktok, and three case studies of young people’s digital activism. In the first case study, Korean pop music (K-pop) fans thwarted police’s attempts to identify protesters by crashing police apps. In the second, they rendered white supremacist hashtags useless, by drowning out the hashtags with their own tweets. Finally, K-pop fans, along with Tiktok users, played a prank which humiliated the Trump reelection campaign. The study expands upon the life cycle effect and generational effects theories of political behavior, and develops a continuum with which to conceptualize and understand the nature of activism. It concludes that digital activism is characteristic of Gen Z, and has real-world impacts. This article pushes back on the notion that digital activism is mere “slacktivism” (low effort token support of a social movement). Instead, it argues that activism evolves along with technology and time, and that digital activism’s real-world impacts can be just as effective as conventional political activism.

Highlights

  • As technology continues to develop, aspects of society develop along with it

  • This paper examines new trends in digital activism through qualitative observations of Twitter and Tiktok, and three case studies of young people’s digital activism

  • Digital political activism has been readily embraced by young people, who are attuned to technology, having grown up with it

Read more

Summary

Introduction

As technology continues to develop, aspects of society develop along with it. Political activism is no exception to this. Digital activist movements such as #BlackLivesMatter are stronger than ever before These movements have prompted a new outlet for activism via the internet, utilized by young people as an alternative to conventional participation. This paper examines new trends in digital activism through qualitative observations of Twitter and Tiktok, and three case studies of young people’s digital activism. In the first case study, Korean pop music (K-pop) fans thwarted police’s attempts to identify protesters by crashing police apps. The present study expands upon the life cycle effect and generational effects theories of political behavior These theories are applied to analyze Gen Z’s (Note 1) growing political impact. The paper develops a continuum with which to conceptualize and understand the nature of activism It finds that examples of digital activism can be just as impactful as conventional activism. I conclude that digital activism is characteristic of Gen Z, and has real-world impacts

Literature Review
Understanding K-pop Twitter
Teenagers on Political Tiktok
Methods
Case Study
Findings
Discussion
10. Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call