Detouring, Rerouting, Weaponization: The Secondary Orality of WarTok
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| Publication date | 2025 |
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| Book title | Technology, Power and Society |
| Book subtitle | Critical Perspectives on the Global Digital Transformation |
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| Series | Technology, Power & Society |
| Pages (from-to) | 144-165 |
| Publisher | Leiden: Brill |
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| Abstract |
Foregrounding the audiovisual format on social media, TikTok revolutionised the dissemination of information and propaganda, especially during
times of armed conflict. Following Russia’s full-scale military invasion of Ukraine, a distinctive phenomenon, termed ‘WarTok’, emerged, engendering a new paradigm of war programming. Coined during the initial week of the invasion, WarTok refers to ‘the first TikTok war’ or ‘the war of super-empowered individuals armed only with smartphones’ (Friedman, 2022). As a portmanteau of ‘war’ and ‘TikTok’, this term, although cynical and problematic in its implications, has drawn significant attention to the platform’s role in augmenting frontline reporting in Ukraine with meme-driven pro-war propaganda (Mobilio, 2022; Kiparoidze, 2022). In the internet era, where each conflict is dubbed ‘unprecedented’ and linked to the latest digital innovations (Tiffany, 2022), it becomes crucial to offer context-sensitive analyses of the underlying conditions that lead to such phenomena. As we demonstrate below, WarTok necessitates critical scrutiny, not only for its sensationalist stance but also for the collapse of contexts it entails. Our contribution explores the realm of memetic TikTok performances, where war-related Ukrainian and Russian video posts amalgamate multiple media forms through remix. A focus on these expanded modalities of audiovisual ‘assembly’ (Parry, 2022) implies navigating the platform using networked expressive elements – sounds, effects, stickers, emojis, and hashtags. Channelling and animating engagement, such an assembly arranges content into searchable formations |
| Document type | Chapter |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004711396_009 |
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