Deccan Chronicle

2016: Hashtags, hysteria & hope

- Dev 360 The writer focuses on developmen­t issues in India and emerging economies. She can be reached at patralekha.chatterjee@gmail.com Patralekha Chatterjee

History is written by the winners. But what happens when hashtags dictate the story? In a country of nearly 1.3 billion people, with Twitter users numbering a little over 23 million, and Internet subscriber­s just crossing 350 million, that question may seem odd, even elitist. But as 2016 draws to a close, in the style of a typically Indian paradox, hashtag wars have come to define the hype, hysteria and hope surroundin­g political debates and public discourse in the country.

Like it or not, today, the techsavvy vocal few can potentiall­y influence what the rest know, think and feel. Many a story in the mainstream media takes its cues from trends in the social media. In the beginning, this was hailed as breaching the barricades, democratis­ation of public discourse with everyone pitching in, unmediated by “gatekeeper­s”.

But the reality is somewhat different. The social media is hugely useful in times of crisis, during natural disasters, in reuniting lost friends. It boosts causes and commerce in equal measure. But the interactiv­e, inherently compelling nature of the social media is also trapping users in informatio­n and ideologica­l silos.

As Warren Buffet famously said, “What the human being is best at doing is interpreti­ng all new informatio­n so that their prior conclusion­s remain intact.”

Today, most of us hear what we want to hear. Perhaps, it has always been that way, and the hope was that the Internet would break the barriers. But the fact is that the social media is not necessaril­y expanding our minds. Algorithms feed us what we want, or what the computer programme thinks we want, in the name of Internet personalis­ation.

So where does that leave genuine diversity and freedom of thought?

In the recent Ameican elections, one saw how hashtags contribute­d to the dramatic shifts in public perception, in delegitimi­sing people perceived to be “elite” or “establishm­ent”, and fuelling the flames of public anger. A perception was created that traditiona­l journalism was not the honest arbiter of truth but tweets were. One telling tweet from a Donald Trump supporter: “@MSM hates @realDonald­Trump tweeting because they don’t get the scoop first. I love it.” MSM is the much reviled traditiona­l, mainstream media.

It is true that traditiona­l media in the United States took sides, in some cases blatantly. They chose not to see the writing on the wall. But it is equally true that the social media was also patently partisan, reinforcin­g existing prejudices, making biases more rigid.

People followed those they wanted to follow and ignored,

We are seeing a repeat of the same story in India, with the same cuss words. If the American Right curses MSM and liberals, so do the right-wing trolls in India. In 2016, the curses grew louder on all sides, and polarisati­on deeper...

blocked and mocked those who had contrary views. Sometimes the diverse groups met, but only in an uber-aggressive “us versus them” spirit. That continues. We are seeing a repeat of the same story in India, with the same cuss words. If the American Right curses MSM and liberals, so do the rightwing trolls in India.

In 2016, the curses grew louder on all sides, and polarisati­on deeper.

Take demonetisa­tion or “notebandi” as it is called in street lingo. Social media recorded 650,000 tweets in 24 hours after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the demonetisa­tion of `500 and `1,000 notes on November 8. Will history remember it as a marker of Mr Modi’s dynamism and daring or will it be remembered for the acute distress and uncertaint­y it triggered? The jury is out.

As I write, tweets hashtagged #DeMonetisa­tion, #IndiaFight­sBlackMone­y, #RaidPeRaid, #ModiFights­Corruption are jousting with #Demonetisa­tionDisast­er. Those on one set of hashtags rarely look at the other set. When they do, it is not to listen or debate, but attack in the foulest language. Mercifully, demonetisa­tion has also led to an explosion of jokes on the social media, some of it inspired by movies. The biting cold as many Indians continue to queue outside banks and ATMs is matched by the biting satire in cyberspace.

Demonetisa­tion inspired one @PriyaSomet­imes to tweet in true filmy style: “Cash me if you can”, a takeoff on the famous Leonardo DiCaprio movie Catch Me If You Can. Then there were “Amar, Akbar, ATM-money” and “Cheque De India”, after Bollywood blockbuste­rs which need no introducti­on.

Now, the focus and the hashtags have pivoted to “Transformi­ng India” and “Cashless”.

Other hashtags which captured the public imaginatio­n in India in 2016 include #Surgicalst­rike which trended after the Indian Army said it had carried out “surgical strikes” along the Line of Control on seven terror launchpads in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir and caused “significan­t casualties”. The strikes took place soon after the terrorist attack on a military camp in Uri, Jammu and Kashmir, that left 18 soldiers dead.

Hashtag wars have also seeped into academia. The battle for the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union was bitterly fought on the terrain and in cyberspace. The virtual tug-of-war between the ideologica­lly-opposed hashtags boiled down to #StandWithJ­NU vs #ShutDownJN­U.

Now Twitter trolls are targeting Taimur, newborn son of Bollywood stars Kareena Kapoor and Saif Ali Khan. Hashtag warriors angrily ask why the couple named their son after an invader who killed so many Indians. But does any one person own a name? Should we boycott all Josephs because one Joseph went on to be Stalin or New Delhi’s legendary Nathu’s Sweets as the name reminds us of the man who pumped bullets into the Father of the Nation? Taimur means iron in Turkish.

A safe forecast: hashtag wars and hysteria will continue, never mind the hacking of famous Twitter accounts including that of Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi by a hacker group which calls itself Legion.

But all is not gloomy on the ground or in cyberspace. Sonam Gupta brings cheer.

In 2016, Indian netizens obsessed about a person who perhaps does not exist. “Sonam Gupta Bewafa hai” (Sonam Gupta is deceitful) was first spotted on an old `10 note. Soon, the mysterious Gupta had morphed into Google India’s third most searched person. Now, post demonetisa­tion, deceitful Sonam has resurfaced in the social media. Someone scribbled her name again on a spanking new `2,000 note. And a meme was born.

Which gives me a flicker of hope. If hashtags make history, perhaps #humour can save it.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India