Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 21 Sept 2022

PANTIES FOR PEACE: REFLEXIVITY IN THE DEPLOYMENT OF A HYPERLOCAL CAMPAIGN TROPE FROM MYANMAR*

and
Page Range: 319 – 334
DOI: 10.17813/1086-671X-27-3-319
Save
Download PDF

Scholars of internet activism have comprehensively analyzed techniques for ensuring the success of online campaigns, but few have examined whether and how campaigns built around culturally specific tropes drawn from non-Western contexts can achieve traction with global audiences. This article addresses this question by tracking the use of a hyperlocal cultural trope relating to the impact of women’s sarongs (htamein) on men’s power in an awareness-raising campaign sparked by a violent crackdown against tens of thousands of protesters in Myanmar. We draw on in-depth interviews with the campaign’s originators and a content analysis of its online component to document how this trope transformed through three iterations over several years. In doing so, we examine the impact of processes of appropriative mediation and digital reflexivity, and the extent to which available technology shapes online campaigns.

Contributor Notes

* Correspondence should be addressed to Michele Ford, Sydney Southeast Asia Centre, The University of Sydney, Brennan-MacCallum, A18, The University of Sydney NSW 2006 Australia (+61 2 8627 5287, michele.ford@sydney.edu.au).
  • Download PDF