dear turq, may you have a wonderful weekend wherever you spend it and thank you 
so much for that very cool post about Shakespeare and Star Wars. Maybe I'll 
eventually understand Shakespeare's language which has always eluded me despite 
high school classes and a Literature major at Univ of Maryland. Which is 
mentioned in this fascinating article below. Which raises so many good 
questions philosophically, psychologically and even legally: can verbal group 
bullying harm and even kill? I think a few months ago a teenager committed 
suicide and some attributed it to cyber bullying.

Anyway, it's all unfathomable karma, not to mention lila, not to mention 
another set of waves rolling in (-:
with a virtual hug and a cackle, Share



________________________________
 From: turquoiseb <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Friday, August 9, 2013 5:51 AM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Internet trolls are the modern-day counterpart of 
witch hunters
 


  
An interesting article, especially on the eve of Unlimited Trolling here on 
FFL. Ponder this during the next "Let's everybody pile on Share" session. Bold 
highlighting mine. 


Are Internet Trolls the Modern Incarnation of Witch Hunters?


In the age of the Internet troll, there's an unfortunately predictable 
cycle for what happens to women who talk about feminist issues online: 
They get barraged with rape threats and harassment. For examples: see here, 
here, here and most recently, here. The anonymous nature of Twitter and comment 
threads allows cowards to 
write hateful things to people without consequences, suggesting that 
this reaction is unique to the digital age. But it's not. The Twitter 
rape threat is just the 21st century incarnation of a centuries old 
reaction. 
Just the other day we saw the modern-day cycle play out, with a 
"countercampaign of online harassment" lobbed at "several high 
profile women" who advocated for Jane Austen and other historical female 
figures on British bank notes. The announcement that Austen would grace the 10 
pound bill resulted in Twitter rape threats by the minute 
against the blogger Caroline Criado-Perez because she both advocated and 
celebrated the "brilliant day for women." 
The scope and nature of the hate is specific to the Internet, argues 
Dr. Whitney Phillips, a media studies and digital culture researcher, 
who is writing a book on trolls. "While the sort of violently sexist 
bile directed at Criado-Perez definitely has precedent (and not just 
precedent but precedents), it also has context," she told The Atlantic 
Wire. "Not only does Twitter allow for anonymous or pseudonymous 
communication, not only does it provide a forum for users to directly 
interface with public figures, its social functionality encourages the 
breakneck spread of information." In addition, because of the Internet, 
more people have exposure to people like Criado-Perez and her story, 
further amplifying the potential haters.
But, like Phillips said, the behavior has precedence. The sexism we see online 
is just a reflection of real world hatred, suggests University 
of Maryland law professor Danielle Citron, who is writing a book about 
cyber harassment. "We have gendered harms that we see these nudged into 
cyberspace where it's much safer for perpetrators to demean," she told 
The Atlantic Wire. Before, you might see acceptable sexual harassment in the 
work-place, for example. And certainly journalists in particular 
saw these feelings manifest in letters to the editor and hate mail — 
the comment threads of the analog age. 
Those mediums aren't as public as Twitter or a hateful blog post, however, says 
Emily Bazelon, who wrote Sticks and Stones: Defeating the Culture of Bullying 
and Rediscovering the Power of Character and Empathy(which was adapted into 
this Atlantic feature). "It has a smear campaign aspect that would have been 
harder to pull off 
before," she told us. There's no editor to keep the mean comments and 
tweets out of the paper. 
Perhaps, a more analogous comparison is a witch hunt, suggests 
anthropologist Gabriella Coleman. "For me what comes to most to mind as 
an interesting parallel is the extraordinary and very public 
demonization of women as witches during," she said. "They were burned in very 
public ritual acts." Or, later, lynch mobs had the same effect. What these have 
in common with the Internet is that they're public, 
aggressive, and the people involved had a sense of disinhibition. You 
feel anonymous in a big group of people singling out a witch, the lynch 
mob has that, plus the added effect of a white-hood. Similarly, 
talk-radio — another breading ground of proto-trolling — gives the caller a 
layer of distance because it's just the caller's 
voice. And, finally, the Internet troll has the protection of the 
Internet, with almost full anonymity and physical distance. 
As the troll has progressed from the IRL witch-hunter to the sad man in his 
basement harassing a journalist on Twitter, he has sought out more 
physical distance and protection from the victim, as it's no longer 
socially acceptable (or legal!) to get together and burn a woman alive. 
Gathering a large group of like-minded people to launch an Internet 
harassment campaign is totally fine and accessible. So, if we use that 
as a metric of progress, things have certainly improved for the 
feminist. Hateful tweets are certainly preferable to death. Yay?
From: 
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/technology/2013/08/witch-hunts-lynch-mobs-and-talk-radio-where-people-trolled-internet/68099/
 




 

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