Exploring socialities on Black Twitter: an ethnographic study of everyday concerns of South African users in 2018 and 2019

dc.contributor.advisorSteenveld, Lynette
dc.contributor.authorAdebayo, Binwe
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-04T14:48:33Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.description.abstractIn this thesis, I examine the phenomenon of Black Twitter, as it exists in South Africa. Drawing on its socio-cultural and linguistic elements, I analyse the kinds of socialities which are constituted on the platform. In the study, I do this by focusing on the key issues which drive the space by evaluating the key everyday concerns as expressed by its users. As such, the overarching lens focuses on three elements: Firstly, the idea of socialities and the way in which they manifest in online spaces; a focus on the everyday as an important site for social inquiry; and lastly the issue of 'blackness', in terms of the way it is used and understood in the South African Black Twitter context. Historically, the Black Twitter space has been linked almost exclusively to its broad base of African American users, who are significant both in terms of their numbers, and their impact on online social culture. However, in this study I engage with the ways in which Black Twitter has been adopted, co-opted and used by young South Africans. As a bona fide 'member' of South African Black Twitter, my approach to the study was cyberethnographic. Drawing on my access to the space, my knowledge of many of its members and dynamics, I engaged in participant observation as my primary methodology. My discussion focuses on three areas of everyday concerns, namely: gender and sexuality; race and politics; finances and the economy. These three areas emerge both as prominent sites of discussion, but also give the best insight into the ways in which young South Africans are grappling with these issues. My analysis focuses on how everyday concerns are handled on the platform, and I focus on the deployment of solidarity, formal language, platform-based language and the invocation of blackness. I argue in my conclusion that while the structure of the broad Black Twitter space reflects a leaning towards a digital public sphere, that the process and construction of Black Twitter's ideas and content are approached via an incomplete, fluid convivial approach.
dc.description.degreeMaster's thesis
dc.description.degreeMA
dc.format.extent114 pages
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherhttp://hdl.handle.net/10962/140575
dc.identifier.urihttps://researchrepository.ru.ac.za/handle/123456789/7759
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherRhodes University, Faculty of Humanities, School of Journalism and Media Studies
dc.rightsAdebayo, Binwe
dc.subjectTwitter (Firm)
dc.subjectSocial media -- South Africa
dc.subjectSocial media and society -- South Africa
dc.subjectBlack people and mass media -- South Africa
dc.subjectLanguage and the Internet -- South Africa
dc.subjectMass media and culture -- South Africa
dc.subjectRace in mass media
dc.subjectEthnicity in mass media
dc.subjectMass media and minorities -- South Africa
dc.subjectMass media -- Social aspects -- South Africa
dc.subjectSex differences in mass media
dc.subjectSocial media -- Political aspects -- South Africa
dc.subjectSouth Africa -- Social conditions
dc.subjectFinance In mass media
dc.subjectIntersectionality (Sociology) -- South Africa
dc.subjectBlack Twitter
dc.titleExploring socialities on Black Twitter: an ethnographic study of everyday concerns of South African users in 2018 and 2019
dc.typeAcademic thesis

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