More than keyboard heroes? #ichoosefish, disaster framing, and environmental protests in Vietnam

Author:

Nguyen Van Quoc ThaiORCID,Trell Elen-Maarja1,Mallon Gunnar1

Affiliation:

1. University of Groningen, The Netherlands

Abstract

This paper investigates the role of social media in mobilizing environmentalism amid authoritarian restrictions, focusing on the Vietnam coastal pollution of 2016. It contributes to current academic debates by showing how elements that are apparently mundane and irrelevant become the stage for political action within social media. We examined the interface of connective actions (social media activism) – collective actions (protests) and the role of food symbolism in translating digital activism into physical resistance that bridges the distance between rural and urban areas. Data were collected from Facebook and Twitter, as well as semi-structured interviews, policy documents, and national newspapers and broadcasts. Food symbolism, exemplified by #ichoosefish, helped personalize grievances and materialize protest actions amid the government’s countermeasures. The results further show that by using social media, especially Facebook, the activists managed to rationalize their political engagement in a non-participatory context and mobilize protests during political restrictions by arguing that their ‘apolitical’ actions were motivated by food-based grievances associated with personal, environmentalist and nationalist concerns. Food symbolism is thus essential in transitioning from connective actions to collective actions.

Funder

Rijksuniversiteit Groningen

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference82 articles.

1. BBC Vietnam (2016) Arrests’ happened during dead fish protests (Originally in Vetnamese). BBC Vietnam. Available at: http://www.bbc.com/vietnamese/vietnam/2016/05/160508_protest_fish_death_environment (accessed 30 March 2021).

2. Framing Processes and Social Movements: An Overview and Assessment

3. DIGITAL MEDIA AND THE PERSONALIZATION OF COLLECTIVE ACTION

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