Observing Memories Issue 3 | Page 68

OVERVIEW ‘Hashtag Memory Activism’ Online Commemorations and Online Memory Activism Dr. Orli Fridman Center for Comparative Conflict Studies (CFCCS) Singidunum University I n these times of new media ecologies and hyperconnectivity, hashtags have become an integral part of our everyday communication. The hashtag symbol (#) is often used as a way of marking a conversation on social media platforms. Hashtags can function like a filing or retrieval system when looking for updated news on unfolding events. In recent studies of digital protests and digital activism, attention has been given to the hashtag symbol, suggesting that the hashtag itself can become a field site (Bonilla and Rosa, 2015). Hashtag activism emerged as an important category of analysis, since online social platforms now function as sites of activism for various issues worldwide. Among some of the most prominent current examples are hashtags such as #MeToo, in the fight for gender equality, and #BlackLivesMatter, in the struggle for racial justice. Hashtag activism, as opposed to routine hashtags, has a recognisable narrative form with a beginning, a crisis/conflict, and an end (Yang 2016). In many influential cases of hashtag activism, hashtags appear in the form of complete sentences rather than single words, as in the cases of #JeNeSuisPasCharlie, #MuslimsAreNotTerrorists, and others. In the new digital ecology of participatory media, digital media users take a stand, interact, show their disagreements, and condemn or support daily occurrences, politicians’ statements, and recent news. They rapidly produce content, communicate back, share, like, tweet, and retweet. A review of some prominent Balkan-generated hashtags in 2019 reveals this dynamic. To mention only a few: #literallyjustemergedfromthewoods appeared in May 2019 in the communications of many digital media users from Kosovo and the Kosovar Albanian diaspora following a comment made by Serbian PM Ana Brnabić, who referred to Kosovo’s leaders as people who “literally just came out of the woods.” Over the next days, hundreds of users uploaded and posted their images, with comments and the hashtag itself, which marked the discussion and the reactions to the PM’s statement (see image 1). Similarly, in reaction 66 Observing Memories ISSUE 3