"Camping" or abortion? Polyvarience and coded language on social media

被引:1
作者
Fredenburg, Jill [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Memphis, Commun & Film program, Memphis, TN USA
[2] Univ Memphis, Dept Commun & Film, 3715 Cent Ave,ACB 212, Memphis, TN 38152 USA
关键词
Abortion; activism; critical cultural studies; critical discourse; new media; polyvarience; social media; society; Twitter; NUMBER; PROTEST; TWITTER; CONTEXT; WADE;
D O I
10.1177/14614448231207101
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
In the context of hashtag activism and hashtag feminism, this article examines the use of "camping" as a code for abortion on Twitter following the 2022 Supreme Court's overturning of Roe v. Wade. Utilizing a critical discourse analysis approach, the analysis assesses the discursive practices of using "camping" as a symbol while considering the affordances and limitations of social media spaces in conveying messages that influence social and political life, such as abortion access advocacy online. The findings revealed the discursive practices created by the "camping" code and the impact of other users' concerns around this iteration of hashtag activism that resulted in the following four themes: adoption, disidentification, rejection or caution, and redirection toward advocacy. This study presents the affordances of constitutive effects online and the limitations of using symbols within social media spaces to claim oneself as a "safe" person to trust in lieu of existing activist networks.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Racism, Hate Speech, and Social Media: A Systematic Review and Critique
    Matamoros-Fernandez, Ariadna
    Farkas, Johan
    TELEVISION & NEW MEDIA, 2021, 22 (02) : 205 - 224
  • [22] Power Plays on Social Media
    Hermida, Alfred
    SOCIAL MEDIA + SOCIETY, 2015, 1 (01):
  • [23] Unified domain-specific language for collecting and processing data of social media
    Butakov, Nikolay
    Petrov, Maxim
    Mukhina, Ksenia
    Nasonov, Denis
    Kovalchuk, Sergey
    JOURNAL OF INTELLIGENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS, 2018, 51 (02) : 389 - 414
  • [24] The symbol of social media in contemporary protest: Twitter and the Gezi Park movement
    Jenzen, Olu
    Erhart, Itir
    Eslen-Ziya, Hande
    Korkut, Umut
    McGarry, Aidan
    CONVERGENCE-THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH INTO NEW MEDIA TECHNOLOGIES, 2021, 27 (02): : 414 - 437
  • [25] Developing and sustaining a social media ecosystem in speech-language pathology: Using innovative qualitative methods to visualise and cultivate a social media garden
    Brunner, Melissa
    Bryant, Lucy
    Turnbull, Harmony
    Hemsley, Bronwyn
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY, 2022, 24 (05) : 558 - 569
  • [26] Ecological Movements' Limited Use of Social Media in Turkey: A Social Network Analysis of Ecology Union within Twitter
    Erkmen, Ozlem
    Arslan, Canan
    Gumus, Burcu
    Dogu Ozturk, Ilknur
    CONNECTIST-ISTANBUL UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION SCIENCES, 2019, (56): : 31 - 66
  • [27] THE LANGUAGE FEATURES OF SOCIAL MEDIA
    Jafarov, Yedgar
    REVISTA GENERO & DIREITO, 2020, 9 (03): : 954 - 973
  • [28] Detection of Hateful Social Media Content for Arabic Language
    Al-Ibrahim, Rogayah M.
    Ali, Mostafa Z.
    Najadat, Hassan M.
    ACM TRANSACTIONS ON ASIAN AND LOW-RESOURCE LANGUAGE INFORMATION PROCESSING, 2023, 22 (09)
  • [29] Social Media and COVID -19 Pandemic: Accelerating the Learning of English as a Foreign Language (EFL)
    Akhter, Tawhida
    RUPKATHA JOURNAL ON INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES IN HUMANITIES, 2022, 14 (04):
  • [30] Social media, temporality, and the legitimacy of protest
    Poell, Thomas
    SOCIAL MOVEMENT STUDIES, 2020, 19 (5-6) : 609 - 624