Feminism Not for All? The Discourse Around White Feminism Across Five Social Media Platforms

BIPOC scholars have criticized that feminism and feminist activism have often failed to include race, class, and intersectional identities in the feminist agenda. Using theoretical concepts from framing, rhetoric, and cross-platform activism, we examine (a) the discourse in social media posts around white feminism and (b) the platform differences of this content across five different social media platforms: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Reddit, and YouTube. The methodology we use is a combination of computational text analysis approaches and content analysis. Our study highlights the voice of those who felt marginalized by the feminist movement including the uprising of #MeToo. We find pockets of conversations on topics such as experiences of People of Color or Women of Color; critique of white feminism, experiences of LGBTQ+ communities, and Black experiences. These posts predominantly used techniques to persuade the audience with reason, facts, and logic. The most common framing technique used was acknowledgment. Moreover, our findings show multiple differences across the five social media platforms.

[1]  Zhiying Yue,et al.  When the Personal Becomes Political: Unpacking the Dynamics of Sexual Violence and Gender Justice Discourses Across Four Social Media Platforms , 2023, Communication Research.

[2]  Minjie Li Visual Social Media and Black Activism: Exploring How Using Instagram Influences Black Activism Orientation and Racial Identity Ideology Among Black Americans , 2022, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly.

[3]  Kaiping Chen,et al.  Framing the Global Youth Climate Movement: A Qualitative Content Analysis of Greta Thunberg’s Moral, Hopeful, and Motivational Framing on Instagram , 2021, The International Journal of Press/Politics.

[4]  Lorien S. Jordan,et al.  #ThemToo?: Trans Women Exclusionary Discourses in the #MeToo Era , 2021, Women & Therapy.

[5]  N. Upadhyay Coloniality of White Feminism and Its Transphobia: A Comment on Burt , 2021, Feminist Criminology.

[6]  A. Phipps White tears, white rage: Victimhood and (as) violence in mainstream feminism , 2021, European Journal of Cultural Studies.

[7]  Anabel Quan-Haase,et al.  Mapping #MeToo: A synthesis review of digital feminist research across social media platforms , 2021, New Media Soc..

[8]  Tressie McMillan Cottom Where Platform Capitalism and Racial Capitalism Meet: The Sociology of Race and Racism in the Digital Society , 2020, Sociology of Race and Ethnicity.

[9]  V. Trott,et al.  Networked feminism: counterpublics and the intersectional issues of #MeToo , 2020, Feminist Media Studies.

[10]  Alison Phipps Me, not you , 2020, Me, not you.

[11]  M. Holling,et al.  “White supremacy in heels”: (white) feminism, white supremacy, and discursive violence , 2020 .

[12]  E. Brunner,et al.  #MeToo as networked collective: examining consciousness-raising on wild public networks , 2020 .

[13]  Cheryl Cooky,et al.  Feminist activism in digital space: Postfeminist contradictions in #WhyIStayed , 2019, New Media Soc..

[14]  R. Hamad White Tears/Brown Scars , 2019 .

[15]  Kylie Moore-Gilbert A visual uprising: Framing the online activism of Bahrain’s Shiʿi opposition , 2019 .

[16]  Lindsey Mantoan,et al.  In The Wake , 2020, Castaway.

[17]  Dhavan V. Shah,et al.  #MeToo, Networked Acknowledgment, and Connective Action: How “Empowerment Through Empathy” Launched a Social Movement , 2019, Social Science Computer Review.

[18]  Dror Walter,et al.  News Frame Analysis: An Inductive Mixed-method Computational Approach , 2019, Communication Methods and Measures.

[19]  L. Corrigan The #MeToo Moment: A Rhetorical Zeitgeist , 2019, Women's Studies in Communication.

[20]  Jessalynn Keller,et al.  “Oh, She’s a Tumblr Feminist”: Exploring the Platform Vernacular of Girls’ Social Media Feminisms , 2019, Social Media + Society.

[21]  Yonghui Wu,et al.  Assessing mental health signals among sexual and gender minorities using Twitter data , 2019, Health Informatics J..

[22]  Sarah Banet‐Weiser,et al.  Empowered , 2018 .

[23]  Rianka Singh Platform Feminism: Protest and the Politics of Spatial Organization , 2018, Ada: A Journal of Gender, New Media, and Technology.

[24]  Alexander Cho,et al.  Default publicness: Queer youth of color, social media, and being outed by the machine , 2018, New Media Soc..

[25]  Bertan Buyukozturk,et al.  Contestation on Reddit, Gamergate, and movement barriers , 2018, Social Movement Studies.

[26]  Kaitlynn Mendes,et al.  #MeToo and the promise and pitfalls of challenging rape culture through digital feminist activism , 2018 .

[27]  Teresa Correa,et al.  Ties, Likes, and Tweets: Using Strong and Weak Ties to Explain Differences in Protest Participation Across Facebook and Twitter Use , 2018, Studying Politics Across Media.

[28]  Guda van Noort,et al.  Engagement with Social Media and Social Media Advertising: The Differentiating Role of Platform Type , 2018 .

[29]  M. Naderifar,et al.  Snowball Sampling: A Purposeful Method of Sampling in Qualitative Research , 2017 .

[30]  Terese Jonsson the narrative reproduction of white feminist racism , 2016 .

[31]  D. Moscato Media Portrayals of Hashtag Activism: A Framing Analysis of Canada’s #Idlenomore Movement , 2016 .

[32]  Rosemary Clark,et al.  “Hope in a hashtag”: the discursive activism of #WhyIStayed , 2016 .

[33]  Hester Baer Redoing feminism: digital activism, body politics, and neoliberalism , 2016 .

[34]  Carrie A. Rentschler,et al.  Doing feminism in the network: Networked laughter and the ‘Binders Full of Women’ meme , 2015 .

[35]  Han Woo Park,et al.  Comparing Twitter and YouTube networks in information diffusion: The case of the “Occupy Wall Street” movement , 2015 .

[36]  Carrie A. Rentschler,et al.  #Safetytipsforladies: Feminist Twitter Takedowns of Victim Blaming , 2015 .

[37]  Jessie Daniels The Trouble with White Feminism: Whiteness, Digital Feminism and the Intersectional Internet , 2015 .

[38]  Samantha C. Thrift #YesAllWomen as Feminist Meme Event , 2014 .

[39]  Terese Jonsson White Feminist Stories , 2014 .

[40]  Carrie A. Rentschler,et al.  Rape Culture and the Feminist Politics of Social Media , 2014 .

[41]  David G. Rand,et al.  Structural Topic Models for Open‐Ended Survey Responses , 2014, American Journal of Political Science.

[42]  J. Feagin The White Racial Frame , 2013, The White Racial Frame.

[43]  Zizi Papacharissi,et al.  Networked Gatekeeping and Networked Framing on #Egypt , 2013 .

[44]  Frances Shaw ‘HOTTEST 100 WOMEN’ , 2012 .

[45]  Maria de Fatima Oliveira,et al.  Affective News and Networked Publics: The Rhythms of News Storytelling on #Egypt , 2012 .

[46]  M. Lim Clicks, Cabs, and Coffee Houses: Social Media and Oppositional Movements in Egypt, 2004–2011 , 2012 .

[47]  Danah Boyd,et al.  I tweet honestly, I tweet passionately: Twitter users, context collapse, and the imagined audience , 2011, New Media Soc..

[48]  Tarleton Gillespie,et al.  The politics of ‘platforms’ , 2010, New Media Soc..

[49]  Hyojung Park,et al.  Using Public Relations to Promote Health: A Framing Analysis of Public Relations Strategies Among Health Associations , 2010, Journal of health communication.

[50]  Joseph M. Valenzano Framing the War on Terror in Canadian Newspapers: Cascading Activation, Canadian Leaders, and Newspapers , 2009 .

[51]  Erik L. Collins,et al.  Empowering the activist: Using framing devices on activist organizations’ web sites , 2008 .

[52]  Darrel Enck-Wanzer Trashing the System: Social Movement, Intersectional Rhetoric, and Collective Agency in the Young Lords Organization's Garbage Offensive , 2006 .

[53]  S. D. Cooper,et al.  A Comparative Framing Analysis of Embedded and Behind-the-Lines Reporting on the 2003 Iraq War , 2005 .

[54]  Brian L. Ott,et al.  The Politics of Negotiating Public Tragedy: Media Framing of the Matthew Shepard Murder , 2002 .

[55]  Dhavan V. Shah,et al.  “To Thine Own Self Be True” , 1996, Communication Research.

[56]  R. Clair The use of framing devices to sequester organizational narratives: Hegemony and harassment , 1993 .

[57]  Robert D. Benford Frame Disputes within the Nuclear Disarmament Movement , 1993 .

[58]  Robert M. Entman,et al.  Coverage of international news: Contrasts in narratives of the KAL and Iran Air incidents , 1991 .

[59]  W. Gamson,et al.  Media Discourse and Public Opinion on Nuclear Power: A Constructionist Approach , 1989, American Journal of Sociology.

[60]  R. Weber Basic Content Analysis , 1986 .

[61]  C. Mohanty Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses , 1984, Feminism without Borders.

[62]  Sarah J. Jackson,et al.  #HashtagActivism , 2020 .

[63]  Prudence Chamberlain The Feminist Fourth Wave , 2017 .