Introduction
BRONWYN CARLSON AND JEFF BERGLUND
1 Shifting Social Media and the Idle No More Movement
ALEX WILSON AND CORALS ZHENG
2 From #Mniwiconi to #StandwithStandingRock: How the #NoDAPL Movement Disrupted Physical and Virtual Spaces and Brought Indigenous Liberation to the Forefront of People’s Minds
NICHOLET A. DESCHINE PARKHURST
3 Anger, Hope, and Love: The Affective Economies of Indigenous Social Media Activism
BRONWYN CARLSON AND RYAN FRAZER
4 Responding to White Supremacy: An Analysis of Twitter Messages by Māori after the Christchurch Terrorist Attack
STEVE ELERS, PHOEBE ELERS, AND MOHAN DUTTA
5 ⵉⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⵏ ⵏ ⵍⵎⵖⵔⵉⴱ ⴷ ⵓⵣⵍⵓⵣⵣⵓ ⴳ ⵓⴼⴰⵢⵙⴱⵓⴽ: ⴰⵙⵉⴷⴷⵔ ⵏ ⵜⴷⵍⵙⴰ ⴷ ⵜⵓⵜⵍⴰⵢⵜ ⵉ ⵉⵎⵣⴷⴰⵖ ⵉⵥⵖⵓⵕⴰⵏ
The Imazighen of Morocco and the Diaspora on Facebook): Indigenous Cultural and Language Revitalization
MOUNIA MNOUER
6 How We Connect: An Indigenous Feminist Approach to Digital Methods
MARISA ELENA DUARTE AND MORGAN VIGIL-HAYES
7 Indigenous Social Activism Using Twitter: Amplifying Voices Using #MMIWG
TAIMA MOEKE- PICKERING, JULIA ROWAT, SHEILA COTE-MEEK, AND ANN PEGORARO
8 Radical Relationality in the Native Twitterverse: Indigenous Women, Indigenous Feminisms, and (Re)writing/(Re)righting Resistance on #NativeTwitter
CUTCHA RISLING BALDY
9 The Rise of Black Rainbow: Queering and Indigenizing Digital Media Strategies, Resistance, and Change
ANDREW FARRELL
10 Artivism: The Role of Art and Social Media in the Movement
MIRANDA BELARDE-LEWIS
11 Interview with Debbie Reese, Creator of the Blog American Indians in Children’s Literature
JEFF BERGLUND
12 United Front: Indigenous Peoples’ Resistance in the Online Metal Scene
TRISTAN KENNEDY
13 Interview with Carly Wallace, Creator of “CJay’s Vines”
BRONWYN CARLSON
14 “We’re Alive and Thriving . . . We’re Modern, We’re Human, We’re Here!”: The 1491s’ Social Media Activism
JEFF BERGLUND
Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Index