Argumentum ad misericordiam: the cultural politics of victim media |
| |
Authors: | Sally R. Munt |
| |
Affiliation: | School of Media, Film and Music, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK |
| |
Abstract: | This article discusses the widespread use of victim tropes in contemporary Anglo-American culture by using cultural theory to analyse key social media memes circulating on Facebook in 2015. Since the growth of social media, victim stories have been proliferating; victim narratives are rhetorical, they are designed to elicit pity and shame the perpetrator. They are deployed to stimulate political debate and activism, often to appeal to an all-purpose humanitarianism. Victimology has its origins in Law and Criminology, but this paper opens up the field more broadly to think about the cultural politics of victimhood, to consider how the victim-figure can be appropriated by/for different purposes, particularly racial and gender politics, including in the case of Rachel Dolezal. In formulating an ethical response to the lived experience of victims, we need to consider the different kinds of critical intimacies elicited by such media. |
| |
Keywords: | Victim shame social media cultural politics race and ethnicity gender |
|
|