Activating the past in the Ferguson protests: Memory work, digital activism and the politics of platforms

New Media Soc. 2018 Sep;20(9):3119-3139. doi: 10.1177/1461444817741849. Epub 2017 Nov 22.

Abstract

This article analyzes the Facebook page Justice for Mike Brown-set up during the 2014 Ferguson protests-in order to rethink the role of memory work within contemporary digital activism. We argue that, as a particular type of discursive practice, memory work on the page bridged personal and collective action frames. This occurred in four overlapping ways. First, the page allowed for affective commemorative engagement that helped shape Brown's public image. Second, Brown's death was contextualized as part of systematic injustice against African Americans. Third, the past was used to legitimize present action, wherein the present was continually connected to the past and future. And fourth, particular discursive units became recognizable symbolic markers during the protests and for future recall. Based on this typology, we show that memory work, although multidirectional and in flux, is stabilized by the interactions between the page administrator, users, and Facebook's operational logic.

Keywords: Connective memory; Facebook; Ferguson protests; Michael Brown; critical discourse analysis; digital activism; interpretative repertoires; media memory; memory work; police violence.