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Mid-Atlantic Popular &
American Culture Association

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“The Knitting Community Has Been This Happy Little Bubble”: Ravelry, Race, and the Presumption of Agency in Flagging Posts

Presenters: 
Megan O'Byrne (Kutztown University)
Angela M. Cirucci (Rowan University)
Presentation type: 
Paper
Abstract: 

In early 2019 the knitting community realized it had a racism problem. Or, more to the point, the supermajority of well-to-do, middle-aged white women knitters were made aware of the many race-based biases in the knitting world. In response to this wake-up call, knitters felt compelled to announce their anti-racist beliefs. This vocal anti-racism took on a number of forms but typically materialized as social media posts. Indeed, many of these conversations began and ended on Instagram where white knitters pointed toward the expert voices of their BIPOC knitting friends. Others though, doubled down on their racist agendas and demanded others in the community #ShutUpAndKnit.

In this paper we explore Ravelry, a niche social media site with approximately eight million users worldwide run by a four-person team, and the choices made to censor content. We compare these decisions to those of Instagram, through the consideration of the 1996 Telecommunications Act that, in part, protects websites by labeling them “open public forums.” Despite Ravelry’s blanket legal protection from liability for content produced by its users, in June 2019 the site banned all content supporting the Trump presidency. In announcing the immediate policy change the site declared “we cannot provide a space that is inclusive of all and also allow support for open white supremacy.” Many users loudly left Ravelry for other spaces on the internet voicing their decision to #MakeKnittingFunAgain. By analyzing race and platform norms through affordance theory, we discuss the presumed agency that the ability to flag posts and report content gives most users, and the disruption of this belief generated by Ravelry’s team, revealing the power discrepancy present in all social media.

Scheduled on: 
Friday, November 8, 9:30 am to 10:45 am

About the presenters

Megan O'Byrne

Megan O’Byrne is an Assistant Professor in Communication Studies at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania. Her research primarily centers on issues of feminism and protest.

Angela M. Cirucci

Angela received her PhD from the School of Media and Communication at Temple University and is an Associate Professor of Communication Studies at Rowan University. Angela is a digital media scholar focusing on the symbolic meaning of programming languages, the intersection of institutional practice and user knowledge, and user experience. Often focusing on identity, she has a passion for studying how digital spaces impact the lives of marginalized communities.

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