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The structure of political e-expression: What the Brexit campaign can teach us about political talk on Facebook (CROSBI ID 245345)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Lilleker, Darren G. : Bonacci, Duje The structure of political e-expression: What the Brexit campaign can teach us about political talk on Facebook // International journal of digital television, 8 (2017), 3; 335-350. doi: 10.1386/jdtv.8.3.335_1

Podaci o odgovornosti

Lilleker, Darren G. : Bonacci, Duje

engleski

The structure of political e-expression: What the Brexit campaign can teach us about political talk on Facebook

Social media represents a space where the more politically engaged can commune around issues and events of importance and exchange views. Often the spaces created, especially when hosted by a partisan or campaign organization, tend to be ideologically homogenous eschewing debate or critique. The UK’s referendum on EU membership represents an opportunity to explore how citizens use social media, in this case Facebook, to express their political views in relation to a controversial and polarizing issue of significant national importance. The data extracted from the public pages of the four most important Leave and Remain campaigns are used to explore the strategies of Leave and Remain campaigns as well as the reactions of subscribers. The data show the Leave campaign the most proactive posters, creating more engaging content and, in turn, gaining an advantage in terms of visibility online. Leave supporters were also more prone to act as cheerleaders for the campaign applauding attacks on Remain leaders and spokespeople and promoting campaign slogans. Remain subscribers similarly endorsed negative messages but were keener to debate the detail behind slogans and critique the ­official campaign strategy and messaging. Endogenous factors relating to the demographic of the supporter groups and the campaign messages, as well as exogenous factors relating to the social norms of behaviour with the pages, are discussed as explanatory factors for the different dynamics observed. Notwithstanding the limitations of big data discourse analysis, we thus suggest the Facebook communities around each campaign page can be seen as microcosms of wider supporter groups and thus we propose that analysis of discourse within social media platforms such as Facebook allow better understanding of wider societal engagement with political communication and the dynamics of contestation that exist around political issues and events.

political discourse, public attitudes, big data, Facebook, social media, campaigns, referenda, Brexit

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Podaci o izdanju

8 (3)

2017.

335-350

objavljeno

2040-4182

10.1386/jdtv.8.3.335_1

Povezanost rada

Informacijske i komunikacijske znanosti

Poveznice