This article explores how political identity emerges within connected multitudes —those
hybrid collectivities that act simultaneously in the street and online, where communication
itself becomes a form of political being-together. Using feminist ethnography and digital
observation of Mexico’s protest cycle between 2016 and 2022, it takes this case as an entry
point to reflect on what ethnography can offer to political communication research: a way of
understanding identity as lived, relational, and communicatively enacted. I argue that, in
contemporary political communication, identity is performative and relational: it does not
precede interaction but takes shape through the communicative practices of a networked
multitude.
Rovira-Sancho, G. (2025). Becoming «Us»: The Performative Role of Identity in Feminist Political Communication in Mexico. Political Communication Report, 32.

