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ID171351
Title ProperDo-it-yourself activism in Pakistan
Other Title Informationthe fatal celebrity of Qandeel Baloch
LanguageENG
AuthorAlam, Zainab B
Summary / Abstract (Note)In July 2016, Pakistani social media celebrity Qandeel Baloch was asphyxiated by her brother and gained posthumous celebrity in the West where her death was sensationally categorized as an honor-killing. Yet Qandeel was a celebrity in her own right among South Asians long before her death. Through skillful use of social media, she created new forms of public space and used them to challenge dominant social norms and political practices. I examine Qandeel’s “do-it-yourself activism”—her innovative use of the digital public sphere to position herself as a worthy representative of Pakistani nationality; to critique long-established norms governing gender, class, and sexuality; and to expand the boundaries of national belonging in Pakistan to include culturally rebellious women of limited economic means. By examining Qandeel’s audacious means of standing for Pakistan, her deployment of marriage proposals as a mode of subversive political activism within the political party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (Pakistan Movement for Justice, PTI), and her use of visual culture (“selfies”) to challenge the moral authority of a powerful Islamic cleric, I theorize a form of political activism grounded in women’s agency that deploys celebrity to illuminate and politicize injustices.
`In' analytical NotePerspectives on Politics Vol. 18, No.1; Mar 2020: p.76-90
Journal SourcePerspectives on Politics 2020-03 18, 1
Key WordsPakistan ;  Political Party ;  Activism ;  Celebrity ;  Qandeel Baloch ;  Social Media Celebrity ;  Pakistani Nationality