From Indymedia to Anonymous: rethinking action and identity in digital cultures

Article


McDonald, K. 2015. From Indymedia to Anonymous: rethinking action and identity in digital cultures. Information, Communication and Society. 18 (8), pp. 968-982. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369118X.2015.1039561
TypeArticle
TitleFrom Indymedia to Anonymous: rethinking action and identity in digital cultures
AuthorsMcDonald, K.
Abstract

The period following the social mobilizations of 2011 has seen a renewed focus on the place of communication in collective action, linked to the increasing importance of digital communications. Framed in terms of personalized ‘connective action’ or the social morphology of networks, these analyses have criticized previously dominant models of ‘collective identity’, arguing that collective action needs to be understood as ‘digital networking’. These influential approaches have been significantly constructed as a response to models of communication and action evident in the rise of Independent Media Centres in the period following 1999. After considering the rise of the ‘digital networking’ paradigm linked to analyses of Indymedia, this article considers the emergence of the internet-based collaboration known as Anonymous, focusing on its origins on the 4chan manga site and its 2008 campaign against Scientology, and also considers the ‘I am the 99%’ microblog that emerged as part of the Occupy movement. The emergence of Anonymous highlights dimensions of digital culture such as the ephemeral, the importance of memes, an ethic of lulz, the mask and the grotesque. These forms of communication are discussed in the light of dominant attempts to shape digital space in terms of radical transparency, the knowable and the calculable. It is argued that these contrasting approaches may amount to opposing social models of an emerging information society, and that the analysis of contemporary conflicts and mobilizations needs to be alert to novel forms of communicative practice at work in digital cultures today.

KeywordsAnonymous; social movements; identity; information society; connective action; digital culture
PublisherRoutledge
JournalInformation, Communication and Society
ISSN1369-118X
Electronic1468-4462
Publication dates
Online18 May 2015
Print03 Aug 2015
Publication process dates
Deposited24 Jul 2015
Accepted07 Apr 2015
Output statusPublished
Accepted author manuscript
Copyright Statement

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Information, Communication & Society on 18/05/2015, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/1369118X.2015.1039561

Additional information

Special Issue: Social Media and Protest Identities

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/1369118X.2015.1039561
Web of Science identifierWOS:000357087400008
LanguageEnglish
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