Race and the Web: Jack and Jill Politics and Making Race Manifest
According to author Lisa Nakamura, during the original, heady days of the Internet, it was hoped that the anonymous nature of the virtual medium would allow for the creation of a post-racial identity. Theoretically, no one 'needed' to reveal their visual appearance online, and thus race would become less important (Nakamura 106). The disembodied nature of the medium would allow for a more fluid and expansive conception of the self. However, the Internet has instead allowed for a plethora of subcultures resurrecting old racist stereotypes. Whites have been able to try on such false personas and thus perpetrate them more easily than members of historically discriminated-against groups have been able to temporarily 'set aside' their race online. Nakamura suggests that people who masquerade as members of other races and use their posturing to advance such outmoded notions are simply engaging in a more acceptable form of blackface or yellow face, like a minstrel show or a Charlie Chan impersonator of the present day. And their actions are just as dangerous.
The digital divide or the fact that users of different races and socioeconomic categories have different types of access to online content likewise explodes the notion of an Internet 'post racial' haven. Someone who is poorer, for example, is more likely to access the Internet using a mobile phone: hence the preference for more truncated forms of communication with less of a visual emphasis like Twitter vs. Facebook. One-quarter of people on Twitter are African-American, which is double the...
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