Ghost in Dissent: Artifacts and the Architecture of Activism in Digital China
Abstract
This study examines the versatile tactics of digital activism in China via two pivotal artivist interventions in 2022: the Xiaohuamei T-shirt and the global Ürümqi road sign projects. It explores how activists navigate an increasingly restrictive digital environment by hybridizing online and onsite tactics and revitalizing the role of materiality. The archival analysis reveals that these movement artifacts, such as T-shirts and road signs, are anonymously produced and distributed through clandestine networks, which are not just tangible records of protest dissent but also vital components of a broader socioarchival ecosystem. The findings suggest that such artifact-centric activism promotes the emergence of more dispersed and inclusive resistance networks that cut across gender and class lines. These networks and their practices offer a fresh template for mobilization that blends seamlessly into the fabric of everyday life, allowing for the preservation of activist endurance and movement afterlives in repressive regimes.