Black Lives Matter is a social movement facilitated by social media, which critiques multiple forms of injustice and disparity. The movement can be viewed as the latest in a string of attempts to achieve racial parity and universal civil rights in the United States, but has been more narrowly defined by the movement's concern with race-based police brutality and racialized violence. Beneath this oversimplification of the Black Lives Matter movement is its core commitment to creating a more just society. Black Lives Matter is not just about race-based police brutality. Police brutality and racial discrimination in criminal justice is one of the many facets of Black Lives Matter.
From a sociological perspective, Black Lives Matter encapsulates the core tenets of conflict theory, because the movement highlights the intersectionality between race, class, gender, and power. The Black Lives Matter movement can also be understood within a postmodern framework and within a structuralist-functionalist perspective. If the term "black" is taken more as metaphor than as literal race construct, then Black Lives Matter empowers all underclass, underrepresented, and disenfranchised persons and groups including women, the LGBT community, and the poor.
What is the Black Lives Matter movement?
Sexton (2015) provides a cogent definition of Black Lives Matter, calling it "both a call to action and a response to the ways in which our lives have been devalued," (Sexton, 2015, p. 159). Focus on black "lives" is the cornerstone of the movement, as its members respond specifically to preventable black deaths and symbolic deaths such as incarceration and marginalization. Garza (2014) calls Black Lives Matter "a response to the anti-Black racism that permeates our society and also, unfortunately, our movements," (Garza, 2014, p. 1). The movement draws upon past Civil Rights movements, and includes as one of its main graphic designs the universal symbol for worker empowerment in the labor movement: the raised fist. Garza (2014) calls Black Lives Matter an "ideological and political intervention in a world where Black lives are systematically and intentionally targeted for demise," (Garza, 2014, p. 1).
However, the Black Lives Matter movement does not solely criticize or condemn. It also provides "an affirmation of Black folks' contributions to this society, our humanity, and our resilience in the face of deadly oppression," (Garza, 2014, p. 1). Black Lives Matter includes about a dozen black-led organizations (Ransby, 2015). While the mainstream media focuses only on Black Lives Matter as an anti-brutality movement, scholars have recognized the genesis of the movement at the intersection between race, class, gender, and power. Chatelain & Asoka (2015) note that Black Lives Matter is based on the belief that meaningful, effective, and lasting social change can only come about by "refocusing attention on how police brutality impacts black women and others on the margins of today's national conversation about race, such as poor, elderly, gay, and trans people," (p. 54)
How and When the Movement Evolved
Sexton (2015) traces the genesis of the Black Lives Matter movement to the killing of Michael Brown by Officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri, on August 9, 2014. However, Alicia Garza (2014) claims that she, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometti first created the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter after 17-year-old Trayvon Martin "was posthumously placed on trial for his own murder and the killer, George Zimmerman, was not held accountable for the crime he committed," (p. 1). A controversial "stand your ground" law entitled Zimmerman to shoot an unarmed teenager in what was essentially cold blood. The hashtag was created as a means of collectively responding to the Martin murder, but after a wave of race-based police brutality incidents, the hashtag grew in importance and expanded its locus of power to become an all-encompassing movement for social justice.
Because racism has permeated almost every aspect of American society throughout its history, the recent Black Lives Matter campaign is similar to previous civil rights movements. It hearkens to W.E.B. DuBois's sociological theories on the centrality of race, class, gender, and power in America, just as the Civil Rights Movement coalesced with feminism, queer politics, and labor rights activism in the 1960s.
On the other hand, Black Lives Matter is different from previous civil rights movements in a few key ways. For one, the Black Lives Matter movement represents the extent to which racism has become institutionalized and entrenched in American society given that the Civil Rights movement was a full fifty years ago. Second, the Black Lives Matter movement capitalizes on social media unlike any other organized campaign of its type. Garza (2014) claims that "cultural workers, artists, and designers" helped to take the hashtag "to the streets," and admits that the Ferguson incident was the first evidence...
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