Indigenous Australians and Community: Diasporic networks resisting colonialism online.

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Abstract 

Indigenous people around the world and in particular, in Australia, boast ancient and deep connections to culture, community and country. The rise of social media has played a distinct role in changing the ways Indigenous Australians interact with community and country. These changes have generated vast diasporic networks and communities which have seen an abundance of social activism in response to resonating colonial legacies, ideology and discourse. Through these communities, change has been observed both on a national and international level. Indigenous resistance has challenged and subverted colonial power since the 18th century and with the rise of social media, this resistance has transcended to massive on and offline networks in efforts to decolonise First-Nations countries.    

 

 

 

The term Indigenous is explained by the United Nations as encompassing self-identification on the level of one’s personal identity, community acceptance, and a profound link to country and the natural resources of that land (United Nations, 2000). Australia’s Indigenous population, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, have resisted, challenged and subverted colonial power since colonialization in 1788. The significance of Aboriginal people’s connection to land and culture suggests that connection to community and country is crucial to the resisting of colonial legacies and imperial power (Dew et al. 2019). Aboriginal people have resisted the settler State since their arrival, a sentiment that resonates with Indigenous societies across the globe. From the Frontier Wars (Ryan, 2013) to the #IndigienousDads movement on social media, Indigenous Australians have defied the purposeful fragmentation of their culture and disconnection from their land for decades. In contemporary Australian society, the presence of resistance and the colonial mythologies which promote the existing health, economic and political disparities experienced by Indigenous Australians is consistent (Carlson et al. 2017). What has recently changed with the rise of digital technologies, is the access to online community and diasporic networks through social media. With this rise, Indigenous resistance has become prevalent online and promoted a sense of shared recognition, trauma and understanding amongst diasporic Indigenous networks across the globe (Carlson et al. 2017). This paper will contend that Indigenous Australians resist and challenge colonial legacies and oppression through the ability to form online connections to community, diasporic networks and a sense of shared responsibility and trauma on social media platforms.   

 

Indigenous Australians experience extreme health inequalities, social disadvantages and economic disparities as a result of continuing colonial mythologies. These legacies exist due to the continuing effects of colonialism, which work to vilify and oppress Indigenous people. Kingsley et al. (2013) suggested that the massive well-being imbalance which exists between the Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples in Australia is widened when Aboriginal people experience a disconnection from country and community. The Closing the Gap report (2016) disclosed that between 2008 and 2014 the Indigenous infant mortality rate was 4 times higher than the non-Indigenous counterpart, only 62% of Aboriginal students finished year 12, and Indigenous Australians represented 27% of the total adult prisoner population, whilst accounting for only 2% of Australia’s total population (Australians Together, 2021). In 2021 whilst some gaps have been bridged or improved many still remain. The Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage report (2020), which measures the annual well-being of the Indigenous Australian population highlights the connection to community and country as being vital to improve wellbeing outcomes. The report states that “Connection to culture is a key to many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’s identity and strength. These cultures are a foundation on which well-being can continue to be built. (Andersson & Nicol, 2020)”. Indigenous Australian communities report high usage of social media, with an average of more than 60% of the population using Facebook in 2016, which was 20% higher than the national average (Korff, 2022). Carlson and Frazer (2020) argue that Indigenous people increasingly use social media sites to participate in resistance to colonial ideology and discourse but also to connect with online diasporic networks. Digital diasporas are broadly defined as groups of dispersed people who are able to connect or reconnect online and through social media (Keles, 2016). Examples of diasporas regarding Indigenous Australians connecting online can be seen in the “I am proud to be Aboriginal” Facebook page (Carlson & Frazer, 2020), “#IndigenousDads” trending Twitter hashtag (Carlson, 2017), and the use of Facebook to reconnect with family dispersed from the Stolen Generation (Carlson & Frazer, 2020). These examples demonstrate a connection with community online and the importance of using diasporas to garner support for issues relevant to the Indigenous experience in Australia. Diasporas and online communities, not only support and aid the reconnection of community but also work to negate the “concerted effort at elimination, dispossession, and disenfranchisement by colonial forces (Carlson & Frazer, 2020, p.3).” Carlson et al. (2017) examine the case of the Don Dale Youth Detention Centre and Four Corners episode “Australia’s Shame”, as an example of how the violent abuse of Aboriginal youth led to a rise in social media activism. After the episode aired in 2016, posts, images and videos shared on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter went viral nationally and internationally. Shortly after, a cartoon by Bill Leak was published in The Australian which depicted racist and derogatory humour and laid blame for issues faced by Indigenous youth at the feet of Indigenous parents. The response to these events accumulated in the #IndigenousDads movement on Twitter which saw Indigenous diasporas and networks across social media spread awareness, and contest stereotypical media representations common to the Indigenous experience (Carlson et al., 2017). Online Indigenous communities refused to accept the colonial and racist implications of these events and in doing so came together in an example of online social activism that demonstrates the importance of shared responsibility in challenging colonial ideology.

 

The improved ability to communicate and form networks on social media allows for new methods of activism, shared responsibility and trauma to garner global awareness and enact change on a real-world level. Indigenous resistance has always existed as evidenced by various events such as Mabo and Others v Queensland. Social media however has promoted shared recognition and understanding of trauma to transcend national levels to resonate with international events which illuminate the struggle faced by Indigenous people globally. This globalization of the issues facing Indigenous people highlight the need to develop tactics and strategies that subvert colonial power and eventually decolonize the Nation-state (Duarte, 2017). Carlson et al. (2017) explain shared recognition in the context that, trauma is understood as an implication of colonization and the systemic practices within many affluent societies which continue to subjugate and vilify Indigenous people. Parallels are drawn between the Indigenous Australian experience and that of African American people in the US. For Indigenous people culture is often linked to issues surrounding over-incarceration, poverty, racism, economic disadvantage and settler colonialism (Gunia, 2020). Issues faced by Aboriginal people in Australia resonate with other Indigenous populations and vice versa. As social media use has increased so too has the ability for online communities and networks to extend internationally. These new networks present on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook are harnessing digital affordances to “express identities and the collective survival of colonialism (Carlson & Kennedy, 2021, p. 1)” which goes on to provide a basis for the theory of shared recognition. Indigenous people represent marginalized groups in many contemporary societies, the significance of this highlights the need for Indigenous people to form online connections not only for community and cultural identity but also to strengthen in-group solidarity (Duarte, 2017). The argument that in order for colonial legacies to be dismantled Indigenous people must be connected with community is substantiated by the revolutionary #BlackLivesMatter (#BLM) movement which swept across the globe in 2020. The hashtag #BLM illustrates how social media platforms like Twitter and digital affordances such as the hashtag, tagging and groups are used by Indigenous networks to challenge colonial ideas and enact activist movements. The Black Lives Matter movement originated in 2013 after the acquittal of a US police officer who killed African American man Trayvon Martin (Andrew, 2020). The social media campaign however gained global attention and mass awareness after videos emerged of George Floyds death at the hands of US police officers (Abad, 2021). The hashtag which trended globally on Twitter was used on average 3.7 million times per day from May 26th 2020 to June 7th 2020 (Pew Research Center, 2020). The huge social media movement which spread across the US and into other countries such as Australia, saw mass protests in response to police brutality and other ideologies relevant to colonialism. In Australia shared recognition and trauma over the violence experienced by Indigenous people developed into protests in most major cities throughout the remainder of 2020 which called for an end to police violence against Indigenous Australians, African American peoples and other Indigenous populations (Gunia, 2020). This solidarity amongst persecuted Indigenous groups would likely not have been possible without the use of social media and online connection to community. The #BlackLivesMatter movement in the United States and in Australia exhibit’s the power of social media activism through its transition to real-world action and change.        

 

Online social activism through Indigenous networks and diasporas ultimately transforms into actuality. Whilst this is necessary to the disablement of colonialism it also presents danger to the emotional and physical wellbeing of Indigenous people. This danger is evidenced by the rise of racism online, which is reported as a daily occurrence by 62% of Indigenous users (Kennedy, 2020). The significance of Indigenous Australians’ connection to community and country has been established as a pillar in improving the overall wellbeing of Indigenous Australians. Social media, community and diasporas have been presented as positive tools for social change throughout this paper, limitations and negative consequences however are present in the literature concerning this issue. These implications encompass online anonymity, racism on social networking sites and lateral violence. Carlson and Kennedy (2021) explain the risk of identifying as Indigenous online and the disconnection this causes in community, the authors also suggest that Indigenous people “are well aware of the intricacies of navigating a digital environment that exhibits persistent colonial attempts at the subjugation of Indigenous identities (Carlson & Kennedy, 2021, p.1)”. The ability to appear anonymously online has been linked to increased instances of racism and derogatory content, especially considering Indigenous people do not necessarily disembody their identity online but rather embrace it as a way to reclaim a connection to culture (Carlson & Kennedy, 2021). The ability for other users to appear anonymously has been linked to widespread online racism as individuals are able to avoid ramifications from online communities (Santana, 2014). Online racial bullying has been linked to Indigenous Australians experiencing mental health issues and sadness at unprecedented rates (Carlson & Kennedy, 2021). Most alarmingly however is the transition from online racist bullying to real-life racial violence and profiling. Carlson et al. (2017) highlight this violence in the case of the tragic death of Elijah Doughty who was hit by a car whilst riding a motorbike through the bush in 2016 (Wahlquist, 2018). The man whose identity remains anonymous was trying to catch up with Doughty as he was suspicious the bike he was riding belonged to him. Prior to his death comments were posted online alleging an Aboriginal boy had broken into a vehicle and responding comments referred to the youths as “subhuman mutts” and called for an “annual culling” in hopes to increase the deaths of Aboriginal youths (Purtill, 2016). This horrific circumstance of racial discrimination and lateral violence is synonymous with colonial ideologies present throughout Australia’s history. This distressing example outline’s just one case of discrimination faced by oppressed groups and serves to remind of the real danger faced by Indigenous people in the quest to decolonize nations. This paper acknowledges the limitations and consequences faced by Indigenous people in defiance of colonial power and discourse and identifies the significance of ensuring the safety and wellbeing of all Indigenous people throughout the investigation into matters regarding the decolonization of First Nations countries.

 

Indigenous people are characterized by a profound connection to country and community. These connections, whilst historically, have taken place in physical communities have increasingly given way to the existence of online Indigenous networks and diasporas which extend nationally and internationally. These communities, linked through the theories of shared recognition and trauma work to consistently challenge and oppose colonial legacies both online and in real-world contexts. The Black Lives Matter movement and other Indigenous Australian experiences are significant as they embody the opportunities presented by social media in destabilizing colonial efforts through real-world action. The communities accessed through online diasporas are harnessed by Indigenous people as a weapon in the destruction of colonial sentiments and the defence and empowerment of cultural identity. Further research is recommended to explore how Indigenous experiences and perspectives surrounding community, social media and diasporas are able to assist in the decolonization of colonial powers on a global level.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

References

 

Abad, G. S. (2021, November 3rd). Why does the BLM movement matter in Australia? United Nations Association of Australia. https://www.unaa.org.au/2021/11/03/why-does-the-blm-movement-matter-in-australia/

 

Andrew, S. (2020, June 11th). People are tweeting about Black Lives Matter now more than at any point in the movement’s history. Cable News Network. https://edition.cnn.com/2020/06/11/us/black-lives-matter-hashtag-popularity-trnd/index.html

 

Andersson, C., & Nicol, L. (2020). Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage: Key Indicators 2020. Australian Government: Productivity Commission. https://www.pc.gov.au/research/ongoing/overcoming-indigenous-disadvantage/2020

 

Australians Together. (2021). Indigenous disadvantage in Australia. Australians Together. https://australianstogether.org.au/discover/the-wound/indigenous-disadvantage-in-australia/

 

Carlson, B., Jones, L. V., Harris, M., Quezada, N. & Frazer, R. (2017). Trauma, shared recognition and Indigenous resistance on social media. Australasian Journal of Information Systems, 21(1), p. 1-19.

 

Carlson, B., & Frazer, R. (2020). They Got Filters: Indigenous social media, the settler gaze, and a politics of hope. Social Media + Society. https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120925261

 

Carlson, B., & Kennedy, T. (2021). Us Mob Online: The perils of identifying as Indigenous on social media. Genealogy, 5(52), p. 1-13. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy5020052

 

Dew, A., Barton, R., Gilroy, J., Ryall, L., Lincoln, M., Jensen, H., Flood, H., Taylor, K., & McCrae, K. (2019). Importance of Land, family and culture for a good life: Remote Aboriginal people with disability and carers. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 55(1), p. 418-458. DOI: 10.1002/ajs4.96

 

Duarte, M. (2017). Connected Activism: Indigenous uses of social media for shaping political change. Australian Journal of Information Systems, 21(1), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.3127/ajis.v21i0.1525

 

Gunia, A. (2020, November 2nd). Australia’s Aboriginal people find new energy in their fight for justice as an officer faces trial for murder. Time. https://time.com/5905168/australia-aboriginal-people-justice/

Keles, J. Y. (2016). Digital diaspora and social capital. Middles East Journal of Culture and Communication, 9(1), p. 315-333. DOI: 10.1163/18739865-00903004

 

Kingsley, J., Townsend, M., Henderson-Wilson, C. & Bolan, B. (2013). Developing an exploratory framework linking Australian aboriginal peoples’ connection to country and concepts of wellbeing. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 10(1), p. 678-689. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph10020678

 

Korff, J. (2022). Aboriginal use of social media. Creative Spirits. https://www.creativespirits.info/aboriginalculture/media/aboriginal-use-of-social-media

 

Pew Research Center. (2020). Use of the #BlackLivesMatter hashtag hits record levels amid global protests over George Floyd’s death while in police custody. Pew Research Center. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/06/10/blacklivesmatter-surges-on-twitter-after-george-floyds-death/ft_2020-06-10_blm_01_new/

 

Purtill, J. (2016). Racist, Violent, Deleted: The Facebook posts dividing Kalgoorlie. ABC. http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/the-facebook-posts[1]dividing-kalgoorlie/7805346

 

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8 thoughts on “Indigenous Australians and Community: Diasporic networks resisting colonialism online

  1. David Bradbury says:

    Great paper Breeanna. I like the idea that online diasporas are “harnessed as a weapon” to combat colonial sentiment.
    I found a journal article by Theresa Lynn Petray from the Global Media Journal, which discusses Indigenous Australians “self-writing” their online identity to achieve collective identity building (Petray, 2013). This helps promote a unified view of indigenous Australians. In the article she covers the colonialist confusion of what it means to be Aboriginal, citing a Tony Abbott comment in which he says: “I think it would be terrific if, as well as having an urban Aboriginal in our parliament, we had an Aboriginal person from central Australia, an authentic representative of the ancient cultures of central Australia in the parliament.” (as reported in Vasek, 2012). This statement suggests that he believes urban Aboriginals are not authentically Aboriginal.
    Do you feel social media is contributing to forming the greater publics view of what it means to be Aboriginal?

    Here is the article:
    Petray, J. (2013). Self-writing a movement and contesting indigenity: Being an Aboriginal activist on social media. Global Media Journal: Australian Edition 7 (1). 1-20 https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/28188/5/28188_Petray_2013.pdf

    • Breeanna Batrick says:

      Hi David,

      Thank you for your comment on my paper!

      I also did encounter that article briefly in my research! It certainly does offer some interesting views on issues surrounding Indigenous identity in Australia. In response to your question I believe social media offers both negative and positive ramifications of constructing and presenting identity. Petray (2013) highlights social media is an effective tool in spreading messages and collective identity building which aids in Indigenous peoples ability to construct their own complex and nuanced narratives in contention of the ones that are often presented online. This argument and others presented by Petray certainly suggest that social media is contributing positively in some ways in the construction of Indigenous representation. It is also worth noting however issues surrounding Indigenous Australian’s likeliness to present as Indigenous online due to fear of the negatively that sometimes accompanies Indigeneity (Carlson & Kennedy, 2021). The spreading of racist discourse and memes over social media is another example of the ways social networking sites perpetrate these negative representations of Indigenous Identity. Whilst I believe there are certainly positive instances of social media contributing to the public view of what it means to be Aboriginal I feel there is also obstacles which prohibit the representation of complex and authentic Identities of Indigenous communities and individuals. Hopefully as awareness of these topics increase we will see more presence of Indigenous voices and perspectives in mainstream and social media so that these identities can inform the public view of what it means to be Aboriginal.

      How would you respond to the question yourself? 

      • David Bradbury says:

        Hi Breeanna,
        I agree with you, I believe social media is contributing to form the greater publics view of what it means to be Aboriginal. The “self-forming” that Petray discusses in her paper describes the ability of social media users to portray themselves the best manner that they see fit. This helps to convey the rich tapestry of the indigenous community and maintain pride online. It is a double-edged sword due to the habits of online trolls to prey on the person not the message which can lead to issues, however I think that the positives out weigh the negatives in this space.
        David

  2. Hi Breeanna,

    Thank you for your essay and choosing such important topics for discussion. I learnt a lot about the way that Indigenous peoples are utilising social media platforms to resist and challenge colonialism, establishing online connections and foster belonging. My paper also referenced papers by Frazer and Carlson as I discussed Indigenous memes. While eye–opening about how useful social media can be, it is also shocking (and sad) to see racism is amplified and extended to and from online environment. Just when we think things are progressing to a positive direction, we go two steps back. So to speak.

    I am glad you mentioned online anonymity and the role it plays in racism on social networking sites. Anonymity and pseudonymity are very difficult as these profiles can’t be identified and therefore perpetrators will often go unpunished. The other aspect is online humour – like the Bill Leak cartoon. When does a “joke” go too far? Why is it perceived as a humour? If viewers find this funny, what does it say about the viewers? I also looked at online harassment extensive a semester ago, online humour goes hand in hand with racism and misogyny.

    Here is the Frazer & Carlson paper that I was referring to… if you are interested. It was eye opening to me. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/2056305117738993

    Thank you again for the paper.

    Cheers
    Mags

    Not to be hard sell, but here is my paper. https://networkconference.netstudies.org/2022/csm/294/indigenous-memes-by-indigenous-hands-how-internet-memes-become-an-important-storytelling-medium-used-by-indigenous-peoples/

  3. Sampaguita Warren says:

    Hi Breeana,

    I really enjoyed your paper, it was eye-opening to observe how much the Indigenous Australian community uses social media, as well as how diasporas are able to assist in the decolonization of colonial powers on a global level. My paper discusses how social media does not create equal third spaces because it is mediated by cultural influences to reproduce social disparities that Indigenous communities face in the “real world”, it was interesting to read that it is also occurring vice versa and the racist bullying online is influencing real life racial violence and profiling.

    Thank you for writing on this topic!

    Sami

  4. Liv Hopkins says:

    Great article Breeana! I like to ponder the connection/disconnection to culture many Indigenous Australians experience, particularly if they were forgotten remnants of the stolen generation. This would be heightened especially in Perth where this is such a cultural divide between northern WA and Perth City. If Indigenous Australians are able to greater connect with one another over our vast land and combat colonialist attitudes at the same time that’s a big positive!

    Despite this though, it’s interesting that you brought up the anonymity aspect from a racism perspective, as that is a talking point in a lot of governments world wide for reducing bullying and hate speech. I wonder what effect this would have on discourse surrounding Indigenous Australians, or would it really matter if the thoughts still exist without them being verbalised?

  5. Luke McIntosh says:

    Hi Breeanna, this is the first paper I have read under this stream and I learned a lot. I think your discussion of how the changes in digital technologies, specifically social media, has generated communities that are passionate about social activism in response to colonial notions and ideologies. I think the way you discussed Indigenous Australian’s connection to the country and community tied in very well with your argument and laid a nice foundation to discuss how Indigenous people are using social media more and more to participate in resistance of colonial discourse and ideologies. I really liked how you broadened the scope of your paper to include not only Indigenous Australians but Indigenous people across the globe. Your discussion of the “shared recognition and understanding of trauma” allowing Indigenous people from all over the globe to connect via social media was definitely a powerful take-away for me. I want to ask; do you think because of the resistance from Indigenous Australians on social media of colonial discourse, more non-Indigenous Australians have also joined in this resistance as a demonstration of solidarity and unity? We saw a fair bit of this across the world during the peak of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020. What do you think?

  6. Natalie Yeo says:

    Hi Breeanna,

    Great paper on the subject! It’s really interesting to consider how online communities has amplified Indigenous voices. I didn’t know that the BLM movement had reached so far, beyond just the US. The fact that an online movement can spread and influence other BIPOC to protest against police brutality and racial injustices. The statistics you included in the beginning also shows how often Indigenous Australians are targeted for crimes. It makes me wonder what percentage of imprisoned Indigenous Australians were incriminated for small, petty crimes or were arrested for nothing.
    With that in mind, it got me thinking about petitions and the like, in which other people, whether relatives or friends of a loved one set up petitions calling for the government to release a certain individual from prison or for their case to be investigated. Would you say these petitions have any value or power to change the minds of the government or police force?

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