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  • Does Celebrity Activism Matter?

    DOES CELEBRITY ACTIVISM MATTER?
    by Sarah Kendzior

    Aljazeera.com
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/08/20128287385825560.html
    Aug 29 2012
    Qatar

    Sarah Kendzior is an anthropologist who recently received her PhD
    from Washington University in St Louis.

    In American society, awareness is action - but when attention is its
    own goal, nothing else gets accomplished.

    It was April 24, 2012, and Kim Kardashian was on a mission. "Let's
    get this trending," she tweeted to over 14 million followers,
    "#ArmenianGenocide!!!!!" Hundreds immediately retweeted her call to
    commemorate the 1915 extermination of Armenians in Ottoman territories,
    among them her brother Rob (over 3 million followers) and sisters
    Khloe and Kourtney (over 7 million followers each).

    Within hours, the Kardashians had succeeded. "Armenian genocide"
    became one of the most searched for terms on Google and a top Twitter
    trend. "Great! Recognition of the #ArmenianGenocide now trending
    worldwide. Can't stop the truth. Join the movement!" tweeted Rob,
    a former Dancing with the Stars contestant and aspiring sock designer.

    "U can't know where your going until u recognize where you've been.

    Help us recognize the Armenian Genocide April 24, 1915.

    #ArmenianGenocide," added Kim, in a moment of sagacity more reminiscent
    of her parody doppelganger KimKierkegaardashian than her own sexpot
    persona.

    #ArmenianGenocide was one of many massacres to trend in 2012 thanks to
    celebrity association. In March, stars tweeted their newfound horror
    of the war criminal Joseph Kony. "It is time to make him known,"
    Justin Bieber proclaimed. "Im calling on ALL MY FANS, FRIENDS, and
    FAMILY to come together and #STOPKONY. this is not a joke. this is
    serious." Kony is still at large. In May, rapper Chris Bown discovered
    that over one hundred people were massacred in Houla, Syria.

    "#HoulaMassacre OMG!!!!! Not cool!" he tweeted, calling on "Team
    Breezy", his fan base, to "raise awareness". His followers asked
    Jennifer Lopez and Britney Spears to help oust Assad. And Twitter
    lit up like an Andy Warhol fever dream: slaughter and celebrity,
    brutality and brevity, replicated in a systematic stream.

    Celebrity campaigns have long been criticised for their fickleness and
    superficiality. "Sustained awareness is what matters, awareness enough
    to care, to do something," writes Jillian C York, a long-time advocate
    for Syrian rights, of Brown's short-lived interest in the Arab world.

    Ethan Zuckerman, a scholar at MIT, measures attention to causes in
    units he dubs "Kardashians", named for "amount of global attention
    Kim Kardashian commands across all media over the space of a day". He
    notes that "at the peak of his infamy, Kony registers only 0.4 peak
    Kardashians, a level she achieved by filing for divorce after a 72 day
    marriage". Since the arrest of Kony2012 video creator Jason Russell,
    interest in the arrest of Kony himself has plummeted.

    In focus: Russia's Pussy Riot

    But when one cause celèbre becomes passe, another arrives to take its
    place, as the jam-packed Pussy Riot bandwagon recently demonstrated.

    Hashtag campaigns like #FreePussyRiot or #Kony2012 have been
    faulted for emphasising awareness over action or understanding. The
    minimal effort required to participate in them has been derided as
    "slacktivism", and their practitioners dismissed as thoughtless. But
    there is logic to the slacktivist pursuit. The ceaseless push for
    "awareness" - and the embrace of celebrities who can deliver it -
    is a rational response to the attention economy, which, unlike the
    real economy, shows no sign of weakness.

    I want to Belieb

    Awareness is supposed to lead people to take action. But in American
    society, awareness is action. Entire careers are devised around making
    people aware of a person's existence without that person doing anything
    besides existing. The Kardashian family is sustained by tabloids
    and reality TV, industries that thrived while nearly all other old
    media failed. Publicity is chastised as crass - publicity mongers,
    publicity whores - but it is arguably a more reliable investment than
    education or attempting to ascend an unsteady corporate ladder. Fame
    eliminates the barriers to success in a world of increasingly unequal
    opportunity. Having achieved fame, one can then establish why one
    merits it, which is why Kardashian business ventures derive from
    their celebrity, and did not proceed or produce it.

    Social media is not the only medium through which fame flows, but it
    is the one most associated with equitability. In my former life as a
    professor, I taught a course on the internet and society to students
    in their teens and early twenties. Inevitably, the conversation would
    turn to Justin Bieber. "But what about Justin Bieber?" the students
    asked when we read a book bemoaning the devastating effect of the
    internet on the music industry. "But what about Justin Bieber?" they
    cried when we read critiques of social media hierarchies.

    Justin Bieber had come from nothing and pulled himself up by YouTube,
    the proverbial bootstrap of the digital age. No corporation assembled
    Justin Bieber. He put himself out on the internet and his talent was
    recognised. It is easy to see the allure of being a Belieber. The
    internet gives the illusion of possibility to a generation that,
    perhaps more than any in recent memory, has had their possibilities
    stripped away.

    In-depth coverage of campaign targeting Ugandan rebel

    Justin Bieber is of course the exception to the rule - but because
    those who make up "the rule" are anonymous failures, his ascendancy
    is mistaken as representative. In an economy where Klout scores are
    listed on resumes, the downtrodden are by definition invisible. At
    the same time, social media allows a simulated intimacy between
    celebrities and their followers, who settle for glory by proxy. It
    is no surprise that Justin Bieber was one of the celebrities tapped
    by the Kony2012 campaign, whose goal was to "make Kony famous",
    because fame is thought to determine relevance, to create caring,
    to force pragmatism from indifference.

    Short memories

    This pursuit of awareness for its own sake works well for the
    establishment of personal celebrity, but it is deleterious when it
    comes to the causes celebrities promote. When existence is mistaken
    for action, then being aware of someone's existence feels like taking
    action. When attention is its own goal, nothing else gets accomplished.

    As celebrities embrace causes, the coverage of those causes reflects
    celebrity values of self-promotion and spin. "I think those of us
    working on these issues should make sure we raise concerns about
    freedom of speech as a whole and avoid contributing to creating
    'superstars' that may attract a lot of (short-term) empathy but maybe
    no real questioning of repressive patterns and the need to fight them,"
    argues Leila Nachawati, a Syrian-Spanish blogger and activist.

    Pussy Riot, the Russian dissidents who inspired the creation of
    balaclavas in "slimming black", is a recent case in point. The Syrian
    fighter as sex symbol meme is another. Having trended, they become
    trends, divorced from the conditions that produced them, isolated
    from the anonymous activists fighting the same fight.

    Perhaps that's why celebrity activism seems least damaging when the
    damage has already been done. The Kardashians' attempt to publicise
    a genocide - whether on Twitter or through a Very Special Episode of
    Khloe and Lamar - stands in sharp juxtaposition with Kim's usual tweets
    on eye liner and jeggings, but it spurred millions to contemplate
    tragedy. In their ceaseless bid for our attention, the Kardashians
    shifted it elsewhere. It is hard to fault the pursuit of awareness
    when it creates fame for the forgotten.

    Sarah Kendzior is an anthropologist who recently received her PhD
    from Washington University in St Louis.

    The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not
    necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

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