1st Edition
Tragedy is Trending Hashtags, Resistance, and Digital Activism After the Christchurch Mosque Attacks
1. Rethinking Feminist Digital Activism 2. Collectivising Hashtags 3. #TheyAreUs in the aftermath of the Christchurch Mosque Shootings 4. Counterpublic Networks and Hashtag Activism 5. The Politics of Response 6. Dying to Be Men: How Performative Violence and Hegemonic Masculinity Fuels Terrorism
Biography
Claire Fitzpatrick is a Communications Lecturer at Edith Cowan University. She completed her PhD entitled Humanitys Gone Viral at Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington New Zealand in 2021. Claire specialises in Political Communications and has extensive experience deploying mixed methods to understand how social media networks enable and constrain political behaviour, with a particular emphasis on how deliberative democracy enables the pursuit of individual, activist and regulatory goals. Her reflexive approach to teaching draws on her own interdisciplinary research at the intersections of politics and media, gender and race, and social movements in civil society.
Beautifully written, critically insightful, with significant original theoretical implications for critical media studies, feminist studies, and international relations. This is an important and significant interrogation into the power and limits of certain types of online collective action, and I expect it will be widely read and cited across many disciplines.
Professor Brooke Foucault, Welles Associate Professor Department of Communications Northeastern University
It handles these digital, fast-paced, and rhizomatic streams of digital interaction with great technological insight, it brings profound reflexivity, sensitivity, and sophistication to this work that is normally seen only in expressly embodied interpersonal sites and approaches to scholarship… And for Fitzpatrick to offer this now – at a time when arguably most of our interactions across lines of national or other significant social difference happen online – makes this research not only richly novel and insightful, but incredibly relevant and timely for the world in which we live.
Dr Emily Beausoleil, Senior Lecturer of International Relations and Politics at Victoria University of Wellington.






