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Testimony and Emergency Bids Testimony and Emergency Bids
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Testimony, Activism, and Alternative Media Testimony, Activism, and Alternative Media
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Racial Justice Versus Infrastructures of Feeling Racial Justice Versus Infrastructures of Feeling
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Social Media, Testimony, and Safety Surveillance Social Media, Testimony, and Safety Surveillance
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Mutual Aid as/and Emergency Media Work Mutual Aid as/and Emergency Media Work
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Conclusion Conclusion
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5 Help! Social Media Testimony and Emergency Bids
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Published:April 2022
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Abstract
This chapter considers informal emergency bids, pleas for public recognition of an emergency on the basis of personal testimony. This form of emergency mediation is provocative in its ability to bring to light situations that do not fit a normalizing ideology of emergency, such as structural injustice. While the bulk of the chapter focuses on the use of social media for testimonial emergency bids, the chapter also looks back to earlier instances, including activist work and the 1991 Rodney King video. This carries forward to discussion of the #BlackLivesMatter movement’s use of social media to circulate testimony and move people to take action in response to emergencies without (and often against) structural authority. The power of such emergency testimony is such that many social media platforms have attempted to harness it through official channels, such as Facebook’s Crisis Center. However, looking to communities’ digitally enabled mutual aid organizing during COVID-19, it seems some forms of testimony and emergency bids continue to operate around and against institutional structures, producing new ideas about what might constitute an emergency.
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