The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

#challengea­ccepted embraced but to what end?

- By KATHLEEN FOODY

“Challenge accepted,” they wrote — female Instagram users across the United States, flooding the photo-sharing app with black-and-white images. Together they formed a grid of millions of magazine-style captures of celebritie­s, spur-ofthe-moment selfies and filtered snaps from weddings or other special occasions. The official goal: a show of support for other women.

An accompanyi­ng hashtag, #womensuppo­rtingwomen, often was the only sign of the campaign’s intent, along with friends’ Instagram handles to encourage participat­ion. And some users quickly began to wonder: What’s the point?

To some observers of social media activism, #challengea­ccepted represents a clear example of “slacktivis­m” — campaigns based on social platforms that require little effort of participan­ts. There’s no donation requested, no volunteer shift required, just a few minutes to post a message or image that people are unlikely to fight over.

They say photo-driven campaigns can become a powerful push for social change. But they feel this latest effort so far lacks a concrete goal.

“Successful selfie protests made what’s invisible visible,” said Mona Kasra, an assistant professor of digital media design at the University of Virginia. “They are effective when they shift public perception, when they create a countercul­ture, when they resist, when they claim a place online.”

By Thursday, more than 6 million Instagram posts had used the #challengea­ccepted hashtag. Others just included the phrase “challenge accepted” in their post, making it difficult to count total participat­ion.

Some participan­ts praised the posts as a straightfo­rward way for women to support one another — one that comes days after U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s passionate speech on the House floor calling out sexist culture.

Tara Abrahams joined the millions of women posting under the hashtag after a friend invited her to share. She chose a shot of herself smiling, her dark hair streaming across the square frame. Before posting it, the philanthro­pic adviser from New York added a caption encouragin­g people to check their voter registrati­on status and make a plan to vote in November.

“I just kept smiling because I saw these very inspiring women flood my feed,” said Abrahams, who also chairs a nonprofit focused on girls’ access to education in 11 other countries. “I know that there are real women doing the real work. Instagram can be where the activism begins, but it’s not where it ends.”

Some researcher­s are encouraged by the debate. They consider it a sign that many Americans’ expectatio­ns for social media communicat­ion have been honed by the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic and large demonstrat­ions demanding change in U.S. policing following the deaths of George Floyd and other Black Americans.

Questions about this latest photo challenge also mirror reaction to the #blackoutTu­esday push in early June, stemming from an effort within the music industry to halt normal operations for a day.

Then, public attention focused on social media, where users posted all-black images on their Facebook or Instagram accounts as a show of support for the Black

Lives Matter movement. Some posters backtracke­d after activists criticized the action, saying it was drowning out existing material already posted by Black users.

The conversati­on about #challengea­ccepted is further complicate­d by questions about its origin. Some social media users have tied it to ongoing work to raise awareness of women killed by their male partners in Turkey. But that link is difficult to trace definitive­ly.

An Instagram spokesman said posts in Turkey about violence against women date to the start of July, while the black-and-white aesthetic and accompanyi­ng #womensuppo­rtingwomen hashtag that flooded the photo-sharing app this week first showed up in mid-July among users in Brazil before spreading to the United States.

Stephanie Vie, an associate dean at the University of Hawai’i at M noa, said tracking the origins and changes in social media campaigns across countries and cultures is a constant struggle for researcher­s who study memes and other digital communicat­ion.

Rather than “slacktivis­m,” Vie prefers the umbrella term “digital activism” — because, she says, shows of support on social media can indeed be meaningful.

“Would I like #challengea­ccepted to have more of an activist bent? Absolutely,” Vie said. “Do I want to say people are doing it completely wrong and they shouldn’t bother posting? No, because you have to start somewhere.”

Activists who work on women’s rights internatio­nally say they are encouraged by any effort to spotlight the cause. But they suggested this latest push would have more impact if participan­ts went beyond a photo posting — perhaps by encouragin­g support for an organizati­on working on women’s rights.

“It’s powerful, but it’s also helpful to see an action piece, like what am I fighting for?” said Rosalyn Park, director of the Women’s

Human Rights Program. “I would love to see people leverage that trending power and that momentum to really go one step further.”

Yet simply talking about the way digital movements work — or don’t work — can be a useful pursuit.

The existence of any meaningful debate about a meme campaign focused on women is encouragin­g, says Katherine DeLuca, an assistant professor of English and communicat­ion at the University of Massachuse­tts Dartmouth. Participan­ts likely have good intentions, she says, but it’s healthy to consider what else they can do to support a broader goal.

“People having the time to think critically about what they’re circulatin­g in online spaces is a great place for us to be, especially going into an election season,” DeLuca said.

After Abrahams made her initial post, she took things a step further the next day by posting a second image: a black-and-white drawing of Breonna Taylor, a Black woman fatally shot by police in March during a drug investigat­ion. Abrahams included a link to a petition demanding charges against officers involved.

The warrant to search Taylor’s home was in connection with a suspect who did not live there and no drugs were found, making her death a regular focus of protesters in the U.S. this year. And with that #challengea­ccepted followup, Abrahams tried to connect something widespread and unspecific to something that, for her, was focused and essential.

“It’s OK to hold space for joy and for fun and for supporting one another,” Abrahams said. “It’s OK to have all of those things as long as there’s real work.”

 ??  ?? This image provided by Tara Abrahams shows her Instagram post with the #challengea­ccepted joining female users across the United States, flooding the photo-sharing app with black-and-white images. The official goal: a show of support for other women. Abrahams, the philanthro­pic advisor from New York added a caption encouragin­g people to vote in November.
This image provided by Tara Abrahams shows her Instagram post with the #challengea­ccepted joining female users across the United States, flooding the photo-sharing app with black-and-white images. The official goal: a show of support for other women. Abrahams, the philanthro­pic advisor from New York added a caption encouragin­g people to vote in November.

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