Settler Colonialism, Illiberal Memory, and German-Canadian Hate Networks in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries

IF 0.4 3区 人文科学 Q1 HISTORY Central European History Pub Date : 2023-07-19 DOI:10.1017/s0008938923000432
Jennifer V. Evans, Swen Steinberg, David Yuzva Clement, Danielle Carron
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Abstract

This article is part of the collaborative research project Populist Publics. Housed at Carleton University (www.carleton.ca/populistpublics), it applies a data-driven analysis of online hate networks to trace how false framings of the historical past, what we call historical misinformation, circulates across platforms, shaping the politics of the center alongside the fringes. We cull large datasets from social media platforms and run them through a variety of different programs to help visualize how harmful speech and civilizational rhetoric about race, ethnicity, immigration, multiculturalism, gender equality, and LGBTQ+ rights are circulated by far-right groups across borders, noting specifically when and how they are taken up in the mainstream as legitimate discourse. Our interest is in how the distortion of the historical record is used to build alternative collective memories of the past so as to undermine minority rights and cultures in the present. We began with a basic question: To what extent is this actually new? As much as the atomized publics of our current day create ideal conditions for radical ideas to fester and circulate, it was obvious to us that we needed to look for linkages across time, drawing on interdisciplinary methods from the fields of history, media and communication, and data science to identify the tactics, strategies, and repertoires among such groups and individuals. By analyzing German-Canadian relations in particular, what follows is a first attempt to piece together some of these connections, with a focus on far-right hate groups—homegrown and imported—in the settler colonial project that is today's Canada.
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二十世纪和二十一世纪的定居者殖民主义、非自由记忆和德裔加拿大人仇恨网络
这篇文章是合作研究项目“民粹主义公共”的一部分。它位于卡尔顿大学(www.Carleton.ca/populistpublics),对在线仇恨网络进行数据驱动的分析,以追踪历史过去的虚假框架,即我们所说的历史错误信息,是如何在平台上传播的,塑造了中心和边缘的政治。我们从社交媒体平台上挑选了大量数据集,并通过各种不同的程序运行它们,以帮助可视化关于种族、族裔、移民、多元文化、性别平等和LGBTQ+权利的有害言论和文明言论是如何被极右翼团体跨境传播的,特别注意到它们何时以及如何被主流视为合法话语。我们感兴趣的是如何利用对历史记录的歪曲来建立对过去的另类集体记忆,从而破坏当前少数群体的权利和文化。我们从一个基本问题开始:这在多大程度上是新的?尽管当今原子化的公众为激进思想的滋生和传播创造了理想的条件,但我们显然需要寻找跨时间的联系,利用历史、媒体和传播以及数据科学领域的跨学科方法来确定这些群体和个人的战术、战略和曲目。通过特别分析德加关系,以下是第一次尝试拼凑其中的一些联系,重点关注定居者殖民项目中的极右翼仇恨团体,即今天的加拿大。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
82
期刊介绍: Central European History offers articles, review essays, and book reviews that range widely through the history of Germany, Austria, and other German-speaking regions of Central Europe from the medieval era to the present. All topics and approaches to history are welcome, whether cultural, social, political, diplomatic, intellectual, economic, and military history, as well as historiography and methodology. Contributions that treat new fields, such as post-1945 and post-1989 history, maturing fields such as gender history, and less-represented fields such as medieval history and the history of the Habsburg lands are especially desired. The journal thus aims to be the primary venue for scholarly exchange and debate among scholars of the history of Central Europe.
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