Regarding the Protests of Others |
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Authors: | Daphne Jeyapal |
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Institution: | School of Social Work and Human Service, Thompson Rivers University, Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada |
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Abstract: | While much social movement research focuses on how activists actively cultivate affect and how social movements benefit from shared emotions, these ideas rarely intersect with research examining how race constructs emotional responses in a white settler society. I bridge this theoretical divide by examining the 2009 Tamil diaspora protests in Canada to study dimensions of suffering and apathy through the construction of the racialized protest(er). Drawing upon illustrations from a critical discourse analysis of 153 mainstream news articles and interviews with activists and journalists, this paper explores how racial logic frames media and public discourse through (1) the expression of protesters’ suffering and (2) the construction of racial apathy by the Canadian public. The paper theorizes why and how race frames the production of suffering and apathy, and offers considerations for social movement theory. |
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Keywords: | Protest spectacle apathy Tamil diaspora print media Canadian public |
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