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Thick Description and Embodied Analysis of Digital Visual Artefacts: The Visual Repertoire of #SisterIDoBelieveYou

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Thick Description and Embodied Analysis of Digital Visual Artefacts: The Visual Repertoire of #SisterIDoBelieveYou. / Prieto-Blanco, Patricia; García-Mingo, Elisa; Díaz Fernández, Silvia.
In: VISTA Revista de Cultural Visual, Vol. 10 (2022), No. Julho - dezembro 2022 , e022014, 29.12.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Prieto-Blanco, P, García-Mingo, E & Díaz Fernández, S 2022, 'Thick Description and Embodied Analysis of Digital Visual Artefacts: The Visual Repertoire of #SisterIDoBelieveYou', VISTA Revista de Cultural Visual, vol. 10 (2022), no. Julho - dezembro 2022 , e022014. https://doi.org/10.21814/vista.4132

APA

Prieto-Blanco, P., García-Mingo, E., & Díaz Fernández, S. (2022). Thick Description and Embodied Analysis of Digital Visual Artefacts: The Visual Repertoire of #SisterIDoBelieveYou. VISTA Revista de Cultural Visual, 10 (2022)( Julho - dezembro 2022 ), Article e022014. https://doi.org/10.21814/vista.4132

Vancouver

Prieto-Blanco P, García-Mingo E, Díaz Fernández S. Thick Description and Embodied Analysis of Digital Visual Artefacts: The Visual Repertoire of #SisterIDoBelieveYou. VISTA Revista de Cultural Visual. 2022 Dec 29;10 (2022)( Julho - dezembro 2022 ):e022014. doi: 10.21814/vista.4132

Author

Prieto-Blanco, Patricia ; García-Mingo, Elisa ; Díaz Fernández, Silvia. / Thick Description and Embodied Analysis of Digital Visual Artefacts : The Visual Repertoire of #SisterIDoBelieveYou. In: VISTA Revista de Cultural Visual. 2022 ; Vol. 10 (2022), No. Julho - dezembro 2022 .

Bibtex

@article{416e214d82b94710b4f445a99079c387,
title = "Thick Description and Embodied Analysis of Digital Visual Artefacts: The Visual Repertoire of #SisterIDoBelieveYou",
abstract = "In this work, we explore the relationship between affect and the use of aesthetics by feminist digital activists to communicate their ideas and protest against sexual violence. Our focus, therefore, lies on the visual culture of digital protest. We consider visual artefacts a visual repertoire of protest (Jenzen et al., 2020, p. 420) that can both be articulated in a specific local context whilst simultaneously echoing global sentiments. In this paper, we analyse the visual repertoire of protest of Spanish feminist digital activism against sexual violence. To do so, we analysed 696 visual artefacts linked to the hashtag #HermanaYoS{\'i}TeCreo (#SisterIDoBelieveYou) shared on Twitter between May 1, 2018, and August 31, 2020. Our methodological framework incorporates a collaborative triangled analysis based on social semiotics (Ledin & Machin, 2018; Van Leeuwen, 2005), socio-hermeneutic analysis (Knoblauch & Schnettler, 2012; Serrano Pascual & Zurdo Alaguero, 2010), hashtag ethnography (Bonilla & Rose, 2015), and interpretative thick description (Geertz, 1973, pp. 3–30). Additionally, we also developed an ethnographic sensibility towards the corpus, which engaged us in a constant dialogue to overcome the positivist trend of data-driven visual digital analysis.Our work here addresses the understanding of how visual discourses can create the affective unification of social media users (Stage, 2013) as a key feature of feminist politics and online activism (Keller et al., 2018). We analysed the use of visual artefacts by the {"}virtual{"} community of sisterhood and concluded that these processes served as a basis for (a) establishing distinctive while versatile visual branding; (b) weaving an affective community; (c) articulating the desire to connect and to gather through love, hope, outrage and disgust; and (d) linking past and present as well as geographically distant feminist struggles.",
keywords = "visual analysis, affect, protest, hashtag ethnography, feminist media studies",
author = "Patricia Prieto-Blanco and Elisa Garc{\'i}a-Mingo and {D{\'i}az Fern{\'a}ndez}, Silvia",
year = "2022",
month = dec,
day = "29",
doi = "10.21814/vista.4132",
language = "English",
volume = "10 (2022)",
journal = "VISTA Revista de Cultural Visual",
issn = "2184-1284",
publisher = "Communication and Society Research Centre",
number = " Julho - dezembro 2022 ",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Thick Description and Embodied Analysis of Digital Visual Artefacts

T2 - The Visual Repertoire of #SisterIDoBelieveYou

AU - Prieto-Blanco, Patricia

AU - García-Mingo, Elisa

AU - Díaz Fernández, Silvia

PY - 2022/12/29

Y1 - 2022/12/29

N2 - In this work, we explore the relationship between affect and the use of aesthetics by feminist digital activists to communicate their ideas and protest against sexual violence. Our focus, therefore, lies on the visual culture of digital protest. We consider visual artefacts a visual repertoire of protest (Jenzen et al., 2020, p. 420) that can both be articulated in a specific local context whilst simultaneously echoing global sentiments. In this paper, we analyse the visual repertoire of protest of Spanish feminist digital activism against sexual violence. To do so, we analysed 696 visual artefacts linked to the hashtag #HermanaYoSíTeCreo (#SisterIDoBelieveYou) shared on Twitter between May 1, 2018, and August 31, 2020. Our methodological framework incorporates a collaborative triangled analysis based on social semiotics (Ledin & Machin, 2018; Van Leeuwen, 2005), socio-hermeneutic analysis (Knoblauch & Schnettler, 2012; Serrano Pascual & Zurdo Alaguero, 2010), hashtag ethnography (Bonilla & Rose, 2015), and interpretative thick description (Geertz, 1973, pp. 3–30). Additionally, we also developed an ethnographic sensibility towards the corpus, which engaged us in a constant dialogue to overcome the positivist trend of data-driven visual digital analysis.Our work here addresses the understanding of how visual discourses can create the affective unification of social media users (Stage, 2013) as a key feature of feminist politics and online activism (Keller et al., 2018). We analysed the use of visual artefacts by the "virtual" community of sisterhood and concluded that these processes served as a basis for (a) establishing distinctive while versatile visual branding; (b) weaving an affective community; (c) articulating the desire to connect and to gather through love, hope, outrage and disgust; and (d) linking past and present as well as geographically distant feminist struggles.

AB - In this work, we explore the relationship between affect and the use of aesthetics by feminist digital activists to communicate their ideas and protest against sexual violence. Our focus, therefore, lies on the visual culture of digital protest. We consider visual artefacts a visual repertoire of protest (Jenzen et al., 2020, p. 420) that can both be articulated in a specific local context whilst simultaneously echoing global sentiments. In this paper, we analyse the visual repertoire of protest of Spanish feminist digital activism against sexual violence. To do so, we analysed 696 visual artefacts linked to the hashtag #HermanaYoSíTeCreo (#SisterIDoBelieveYou) shared on Twitter between May 1, 2018, and August 31, 2020. Our methodological framework incorporates a collaborative triangled analysis based on social semiotics (Ledin & Machin, 2018; Van Leeuwen, 2005), socio-hermeneutic analysis (Knoblauch & Schnettler, 2012; Serrano Pascual & Zurdo Alaguero, 2010), hashtag ethnography (Bonilla & Rose, 2015), and interpretative thick description (Geertz, 1973, pp. 3–30). Additionally, we also developed an ethnographic sensibility towards the corpus, which engaged us in a constant dialogue to overcome the positivist trend of data-driven visual digital analysis.Our work here addresses the understanding of how visual discourses can create the affective unification of social media users (Stage, 2013) as a key feature of feminist politics and online activism (Keller et al., 2018). We analysed the use of visual artefacts by the "virtual" community of sisterhood and concluded that these processes served as a basis for (a) establishing distinctive while versatile visual branding; (b) weaving an affective community; (c) articulating the desire to connect and to gather through love, hope, outrage and disgust; and (d) linking past and present as well as geographically distant feminist struggles.

KW - visual analysis

KW - affect

KW - protest

KW - hashtag ethnography

KW - feminist media studies

U2 - 10.21814/vista.4132

DO - 10.21814/vista.4132

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10 (2022)

JO - VISTA Revista de Cultural Visual

JF - VISTA Revista de Cultural Visual

SN - 2184-1284

IS - Julho - dezembro 2022

M1 - e022014

ER -