@article{Özkula_2021, title={The problem of history in digital activism: Ideological narratives in digital activism literature}, volume={26}, url={https://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/10597}, DOI={10.5210/fm.v26i8.10597}, abstractNote={<p>The past decades have generated a wealth of literature on digital activism. Even so, the phenomenon has been little historicised. This paper engages in a deconstructionist exercise on historical references in digital activism literature towards exploring implicit meaning-making in a symbolic-interactionist tradition. It identifies four distinct narratives: 1) a technology narrative [activism as technology-driven]; 2) a communications narrative [activism on the basis of communication options]; 3) an online-off-line narrative [activism based on an online-off-line dichotomy]; and 4) an engagement narrative [activism based on its affordances for public engagement]. The paper argues that these narratives contribute to a distinct, polysemic, and paradoxical understanding of digital activism as a phenomenon that is technologically driven (technological determinism), and both distinct to and enmeshed with traditional activism. In doing so, this narrative analysis shows a range of underlying ideological assumptions in digital activism study and conceptualisation, which informs how the phenomenon is understood today.</p>}, number={8}, journal={First Monday}, author={Özkula, Suay Melisa}, year={2021}, month={Jul.} }