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Black is black: identidad afroamericana, Barack Obama y las políticas de la imagen en la web 2.0.
Author(s) -
Luis Vives-Ferrándiz
Publication year - 2014
Language(s) - Spanish
DOI - 10.6035/potestas.2014.7.10
Subject(s) - political science , humanities , art
El presente artículo estudia el uso estratégico de las redes sociales por parte de Barack Obama para reforzar su identidad afroamericana y su blackness. Obama, desde la campaña electoral de 2008, ha sido criticado por no ser representativo de la población negra. Sin embargo, tras su victoria electoral, Obama y su equipo han desarrollado una estrategia basada en el uso de las redes sociales para relacionar la imagen de Obama con los mitos y leyendas de las luchas por los derechos civiles de los años sesenta. Así, la identidad se convierte en algo customizable, la llamada post-blackness.The aim of the present paper is to analyse the use of the social media by Barack Obama to strengthten his African-American identity and his blackness. Since the presidential campaign of 2008, Obama has been criticized for not being black enough. However, after his presidential win, Barack Obama and his team had pursued a strategy based on the use of social media to link the image of Obama to the myths and legends of the civil rights movement of the 60’s. Then, identity is seen as something malleable, the so-called post-blackness

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