ABSTRACT
Existing research has affirmed that Black people historically mastered oral communication strategies to resist subjugation and oppression by dominant groups, and have emerged as leaders in technological innovation. This article takes seriously Black users’ social media engagement and focuses particularly on Black joy online. We analyze a rich collection of discourse spanning both Twitter and Vine through which Black users utilize the affordances of both platforms to challenge dominant narratives that demean and dehumanize Black people. We argue that Black users seize upon the interplay of the applications to not only express and foster joy, but to extend historic legacies of Black oral culture and further cultivate contemporary strategies that leverage – but also transcend – the affordances of each platform.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes on contributors
Dr. Jessica H. Lu is Assistant Director of the African American History, Culture & Digital Humanities (AADHum) initiative and a Research Educator in the First-Year Innovation & Research Experience (FIRE) program at the University of Maryland, College Park
Dr. Catherine Knight Steele is Director of the African American History, Culture & Digital Humanities (AADHum) initiative and an Assistant Professor of Communication at the University of Maryland, College Park.
ORCID
Jessica H. Lu http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3202-3963