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‘Pipe Down Silly Girl’: The Silencing, Vilification and Discrediting of Girl Activists

Lindy Cameron (La Trobe University, Australia)

Childhood, Youth and Activism: Demands for Rights and Justice from Young People and their Advocates

ISBN: 978-1-80117-469-5, eISBN: 978-1-80117-468-8

Publication date: 14 December 2023

Abstract

Using data from a feminist discourse analysis of comments on Facebook news articles, this research outlines backlash and regulatory practices directed towards youth activists Greta Thunberg, X González and Malala Yousafzai. A conceptual framework of semiotic violence highlights how these comments function to silence, delegitimise, vilify and punish sociopolitically active girls who challenge the status quo. The first mode of semiotic violence works to symbolically annihilate girl activists by silencing or rendering their political contributions invisible. The most obvious manifestation of this is instructing girls to shut up and go away. Additionally, their activism is ignored by refusals to acknowledge it as appropriate through suggestions they focus on gender-normative activities, such as domestic chores, playing with dolls and finding boyfriends. Undermining girls’ agency by describing them as puppets, mouthpieces, script readers, pawns and tools is also common. Here, girls’ contributions are rendered invisible through implications that they are being brainwashed and manipulated. The second mode of semiotic violence reinforces ideologies that girls are not politically competent and punishes them for being outspoken. This includes explicitly discrediting girls’ knowledge and abilities. Regulating their emotionality is also prevalent. This is consistent with Liberal political theory which justified women’s exclusion from public life by associating men with reason and women with emotion. Finally, insults degrade them for transgressing into a space demarcated as an adult and masculine realm. The semiotic violence directed towards these ‘girl power’ figures highlights that many people do not believe girls have the right to assert their sociopolitical opinion.

Keywords

Citation

Cameron, L. (2023), "‘Pipe Down Silly Girl’: The Silencing, Vilification and Discrediting of Girl Activists", Wright, K. and McLeod, J. (Ed.) Childhood, Youth and Activism: Demands for Rights and Justice from Young People and their Advocates (Sociological Studies of Children and Youth, Vol. 33), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 89-108. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1537-46612023006

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Lindy Cameron