id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_j6pma7azrfdsvmuamp3ynrhq3a Stuart Davis From the Streets to the Screen to Nowhere: Las Morras and the Fragility of Networked Digital Activism 2019 .pdf text/html 9019 588 57 More specifically, it will draw on a case study of the Mexico City-based feminist media collective Las Morras in order to address both the role of networked digital activism for raising awareness about gender-based harassment and its limits for facilitating longer-term social/political transformations. Incorporating a qualitative content analysis of the responses to YouTube videos and comments taken from Las Morras' Twitter and Facebook accounts (before deletion) with in-depth interviews with three of the group's four founding members, we argue that Las Morras offers a powerful illustration of the paradoxical role of networked digital media as activist tool. Our analysis draws on the case of Las Morras to first present a conceptual interrogation of the difficulties of sustaining activist projects borne or incubated digitally as well as an opening in the move described by Dubravka and Davis (2018), Mason-Deese (2018), Rodino-Colocino (2019) and others to utilise digital media as part of a larger repertoire of solidarity-building tactics within social movement campaigns fighting rape culture, everyday misogyny, gender-based violence, and other systemic issues related to structural power differentials. ./cache/work_j6pma7azrfdsvmuamp3ynrhq3a.pdf ./txt/work_j6pma7azrfdsvmuamp3ynrhq3a.txt