This article is a self‐reflexive case study of the Socialist Project's (SP) tactical uses of Meta's Facebook and Google's YouTube platforms. Formed in early 2003 by Leo Panitch (1945–2020), Greg Albo, Sam Gindin, Herman Rosenfeld, and others, the SP is a small Toronto‐based democratic socialist organization that for nearly two decades has contributed to wider efforts to build and sustain an anticapitalist “infrastructure of dissent” and “radical imagination.” While Facebook's and YouTube's ownership structures, business models, and datafication and commodification mechanisms limit the SP's tactical uses of these platforms, the SP's agency to use these to try to make history in digital conditions not of its own choosing is significant. This article argues that the SP's tactical use of social media platforms exists between structure and agency, at the interface of top‐down platform capitalist business models, mechanisms, and logics and bottom‐up anticapitalist organization building, public pedagogy, and alternative media making.
The Socialist Project on Social Media Platforms: Anticapitalist Organization in Platform Capitalism
Tanner Mirrlees is associate professor in the Communication and Digital Media Studies Program, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, Ontario Tech University. Some of his current research examines the geopolitical economy of US and Chinese information and communication technology and media industries; digital technologies and energy transition; video games and warfare; and Left and Right social media tactics. He is the author of Global Entertainment Media: Between Cultural Imperialism and Cultural Globalization (2013), Hearts and Mines: The US Empire's Culture Industry (2016), and EdTech Inc.: Selling, Automating and Globalizing Higher Education in the Digital Age (2019), and the co-editor of Media Imperialism: Continuity and Change (2019), Media, Technology, and the Culture of Militarism (2014), and The Television Reader (2012).
Tanner Mirrlees; The Socialist Project on Social Media Platforms: Anticapitalist Organization in Platform Capitalism. South Atlantic Quarterly 1 October 2023; 122 (4): 697–712. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-10779451
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