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Love, Affiliation, and Emotional Recognition in #kämpamalmö — The Social Role of Emotional Language in Twitter Discourse
Department of Journalism, Media and Communication, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, Sweden.
2017 (English)In: Social Media + Society, E-ISSN 2056-3051, Vol. 3, no 1Article in journal (Refereed) Published
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Abstract [en]

While emotional language and imagery in protest esthetics are nothing new, emotions have been repressed in modern political discourse at large, as being seen as irrational if not dangerous. As new media platforms, such as Twitter and Facebook, are becoming central media spaces for live online broadcasting of political protests, they have become an important site of discursive struggle for researchers to take into account. This article argues that emotional language use is not merely something excessive but a central discursive resource for participants in communicating their political and social relations. The analysis in this article is based on data collected from the Twitter hashtag #kämpamalmö during an anti-fascist demonstration that took place in Malmö, Sweden in 2014. Methodologically, this article is guided by a critical discourse analytical approach, with a focus on how emotional language use allows participants to form collectivities. Empirically, the article identifies how participants make use of emotional language to negotiate and relate to and identify with objects, with the outcome of different forms of socialites. One example of this is how the city itself became a central object of negotiation, as a contested love object as well as a political “empty signifier.” Another object around which participants negotiate themselves is “love” itself, as in love for the movement and as a political object in itself.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Sage Publications, 2017. Vol. 3, no 1
Keywords [en]
critical discourse analysis; political engagement; political subjectivity; social movements; sociology of emotions
National Category
Media Studies
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-60161DOI: 10.1177/2056305117696522ISI: 000443457700013Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85052089206OAI: oai:DiVA.org:hj-60161DiVA, id: diva2:1751233
Available from: 2023-04-17 Created: 2023-04-17 Last updated: 2023-04-17Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Being political in the media – Political identities in journalistic and Twitter discourse
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Being political in the media – Political identities in journalistic and Twitter discourse
2019 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

This thesis is about the role of media discourse in shaping the political identities of those who want to be heard in public. The ways in which people are able to speak, know, and feel in political situations have important implications for how we conceive of the possibilities to be engaged in contemporary democracy. This thesis offer four empirical studies of how political identities are constructed through journalism and social networking services in cases in which people have decided to make their voices heard. Identities constructed through mediated participation have important implications for how we understand the possibilities to act politically in public, a public that that is characterized as having a multifarious media ecology. Methodologically as well as theoretically it is bound together by a discursive approach to political identities, which means that it is at the discursive level of mediation that identities are analysed as a means to open up for discussions about the limits and constraints of what it means to be political today, what kind and now the media facilitate political engagement. Empirically it analyses print and radio journalism as well as emotional tweets and Twitter profiles to map out ways in which political identities are constructed in activist participation in and through the media. The four different studies contribute to discussions around what it is to be knowledgeable, emotional, subjective and able when you are communicating politics in media discourse. One of the main contribution is that political identities in the media are precarious and that research need to be careful about making too simplistic assumptions about those who make their voices heard in public or what they need to become in undertaking this, and there is a necessary precarious quality to becoming or emerging political in the media, which poses important challenges for social scientific studies that wishes to understand what and who those who act politically through the media.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Göteborg: Institutionen för journalistik och masskommunikation, Göteborgs universitet, 2019. p. 136
Series
Gothenburg studies in journalism and mass communication, ISSN 1101-4652
Keywords
political identities, critical discourse analysis, subjectivity, activism, political engagement
National Category
Media Studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-60159 (URN)9789188212917 (ISBN)9789188212931 (ISBN)
Available from: 2023-04-17 Created: 2023-04-17 Last updated: 2023-04-17Bibliographically approved

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