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“Right-Wing Safe Space” Versus “Comrade Major”: Media Ideologies of Far-Right Russian Social Media Users Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-14 Petr Oskolkov, Eyal Lewin, Sabina Lissitsa
A significant part of far-right activities worldwide take place within the media ecosystem formed by accounts and communities on social media platforms. Drawing on the media ideology approach, this study investigates how far-right Russian internet users perceive various social media platforms and how their sociopolitical beliefs affect these perceptions. Based on a series of in-depth semi-structured
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Torrential Twitter? Measuring the Severity of Harassment When Canadian Female Politicians Tweet About Climate Change Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-10 Inessa De Angelis
The online harassment of female politicians who focus on climate change and environmental policy has become a major problem in Canada and other democratic nations. Despite growing awareness of the problem, there is little agreement among scholars on how to measure these nuanced forms of harassment. This study develops an original seven-point scale to measure the severity of harassment three Canadian
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DIY-Online Reconciliation? The Role of Memes in Navigating Inter-Group Boundaries in the Context of Sri Lanka’s 2022 Political Crisis Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-07 Andreas T. Hirblinger, Sara Kallis, Hasini A. Haputhanthri
Social media is increasingly viewed as a venue for organized peacebuilding efforts. However, current research has paid little attention to the vast array of everyday, self-organized social media interactions that could help overcome societal divisions. This article analyses the role of online memes in everyday online reconciliation, using Sri Lanka’s 2022 political crisis as a case study. We argue
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Where is the Global South? Northern Visibilities in Digital Activism Research Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-07 Suay M. Özkula, Paul J. Reilly
The seemingly global nature of English-language hashtags often obscures activism from outside the Global North (GN). This systematic review explores geographic representation in this field ( N = 315 articles) through an investigation of case study location, author affiliation, methods of data collection and analysis, and researched social media platforms. The results show a preponderance of GN/Majority
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The Impact of Social Norms on Adolescents’ Self-Presentation Practices on Social Media Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-30 Arne Freya Zillich, Annika Wunderlich
Social media platforms such as Instagram and Snapchat offer adolescents many opportunities to control how other users see and perceive them. By observing their peers’ self-presentations and receiving feedback on their own self-presentations from them, adolescents learn what is typical (descriptive norms) and appropriate (injunctive norms) on different social media platforms. Based on computer-assisted
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Attitudes on Data Use for Public Benefit: Investigating Context-Specific Differences Across Germany, Spain, and the United Kingdom With a Longitudinal Survey Experiment Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-30 Frederic Gerdon
With technological advances, governments and companies gain opportunities to collect data to provide public benefits. However, such data collections and uses need to fulfill ethical standards and comply with citizens’ privacy preferences, which may vary across several dimensions. The Comparative Privacy Research Framework suggests specific comparative dimensions that may shape such privacy-related
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Online and Abused: Girls of Color Facing Racialized Sexual Harassment Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-29 Pallavi Guha, Paromita Pain
This study, based on 841 surveys with 18-to-19-year-old teenage girls who live, work, or attend school in the Greater Baltimore area, investigated their social media use and the kind of harassment they are subjected to on different platforms. Racialized sexual harassment was rampant, with girls of color being inundated with requests for nudes and sexual comments, especially on Facebook. Participants
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Never Mess With the “Memers”: How Meme Creators Are Redefining Contemporary Politics Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-27 Mihaela-Georgiana Mihăilescu
In the ever-evolving landscape of online communication, memes have emerged as potent tools for influencing public opinion. This qualitative study explores the motivations, intentions, and strategic approaches of six meme creators through semi-structured in-depth interviews. It analyses how meme creators perceive and recognize their evolving roles as political actors, challenging traditional communication
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Becoming Spectral: Toward a Media History of Ghosting Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-26 Torbjörn Rolandsson, Sadie Couture
This article contextualizes contemporary forms of digital ghosting by examining how two of its historical precursors—Victorian calling culture and answering machines—have been represented in North American women’s magazines. To do so, we develop mediated avoidance as an analytical heuristic. This concept captures the material, relational and social dimensions of a set of understudied media practices
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Turn It on! Turn It on? Privacy Management of Pupils and Teachers in Online Learning During COVID-19 Lockdowns in Germany and Israel Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-26 Leyla Dogruel, Dmitri Epstein, Sven Joeckel, Nicholas John
The transition to emergency remote teaching (ERT) through the use of video conferencing software during the COVID-19 lockdowns posed significant challenges to privacy management for both pupils and teachers across the world. One question became pivotal: Must I turn my camera on? While the question of turning on one’s camera has pedagogical consequences, our study sets out to examine the implications
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Who Can Say What? Testing the Impact of Interpersonal Mechanisms and Gender on Fairness Evaluations of Content Moderation Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-26 Ina Weber, João Gonçalves, Gina M. Masullo, Marisa Torres da Silva, Joep Hofhuis
Content moderation is commonly used by social media platforms to curb the spread of hateful content. Yet, little is known about how users perceive this practice and which factors may influence their perceptions. Publicly denouncing content moderation—for example, portraying it as a limitation to free speech or as a form of political targeting—may play an important role in this context. Evaluations
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Can Social Media Engagement Predict Election Results? Bandwagon Effects of Tweets About US Senate Candidates Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-21 Jinping Wang, S. Shyam Sundar, Nilàm Ram
The social media platform X (formerly Twitter) has grown to become an important venue for political discourse, with candidates using it integrally in their election campaigns. However, it is not clear if activity on Twitter can be used to forecast elections, given conflicting findings in the literature. By analyzing 830,796 tweets mentioning key hashtags related to nine US senate races in 2014, 2016
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Politicians Under Fire: Citizens’ Incivility Against Political Leaders on Social Media Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-21 Sara Bentivegna, Rossella Rega
This research uses artificial intelligence and manual content-analysis to examine the diffusion of incivility against political leaders on Twitter during the 2022 Italian election campaign. Using a mixed approach (artificial intelligence and manual content analysis), we examined 22,465 uncivil tweets posted in the 4 weeks before the vote. Results show that hostility toward leaders increases as voting
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Telehealth “Verzuz” Radical Telehealing: Reimagining Social Media as Virtual Healing Spaces for Black Communities Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Chelsea A. Allen, Zuleka R. Henderson, Jalana Harris, Rae L. Chang, Errica L. Williams, Courtney D. Cogburn
Evidence suggests that the conception of “mental health,” as well as Western health care models, needs to be reimagined to better reflect the unique care needs of Black people. Within these systems, Black people are more likely to experience secondary victimization and retraumatization. Despite these systemic failings, Black people often find ways to manage self-care, wellness, and healing. Within
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Queerness and Mental Health in India: An Intersectional Approach to Sensitive Social Media Disclosures Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Annika Pinch, Jeremy Birnholtz, Jatin Chaudary, Preeti Tripathi, Shruta Rawat, Alpana Dange, Rachel Kornfield
Despite the growing body of research on people disclosing sensitive details about their identities or experiences online, few studies have focused on how individuals with intersecting stigmas manage these disclosures. Those facing multiple, overlapping sources of discrimination may encounter compounded challenges, which can complicate their assessment of the perceived benefits and risks of disclosure
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Understanding the Motivations of Young Adults to Engage in Privacy Protection Behavior While Setting Up Smartphone Apps: A Cross-Country Comparison Between Romania and Germany Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Delia Cristina Balaban, Maria Mustățea, Valeriu Frunzaru
Smartphones have become daily companions and store many personal information, including contact lists, photos, and videos. Even though users download smartphone apps for various purposes, they are also data collection instruments. Within the Protection Motivation Theory research streamline, the present research focuses from a comparative perspective on young adults’ concerns and engagement with privacy
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Online Privacy, Young People, and Datafication: Different Perceptions About Online Privacy Across Antigua & Barbuda, Australia, Ghana, and Slovenia Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-12 Rys Farthing, Katja Koren Ošljak, Teki Akuetteh, Kadian Camacho, Genevieve Smith-Nunes, Jun Zhao
Children and young people’s online privacy is increasingly challenged by the datafication of the digital world, and this is an increasingly important area of policy concern. Understanding what young people understand online privacy to be, and what they want done to protect it, is key to creating effective and rights-realizing policy responses. This article explores young people’s perceptions across
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The AI Chatbot Always Flirts With Me, Should I Flirt Back: From the McDonaldization of Friendship to the Robotization of Love Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-09 Bibo Lin
How is the use of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies, such as machine learning (ML) algorithms and Large Language Models (LLMs), in social chatbots transforming friendship and love? This study investigates Replika, an app offering AI friends and/or lovers to users. Unlike most AI companion research grounded in Human-Machine Interaction (HMI) and interpersonal communication theories, this study
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Using Pregnancy and Parenting Apps and Social Media During COVID-19: Absence and Sociality, Agency and Cultural Negotiations for South Asian–Origin Women in Australia Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-08 Sukhmani Khorana, Ruth DeSouza, Bhavya Chitranshi
This article reports on and analyses data from a situated and in-depth project on the experiences of six cisgender South Asian-Australian women/people who gave birth during the COVID-19 pandemic. Prior to the pandemic, negatively racialized women experienced barriers to health care and a lack of social support, which were further exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic. International border closures
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Webtoons, Desperately Seeking Viewers: Interactive Creativity in Social Media Platforms and Cultural Appropriation of Global Media Production Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-06 Sunny Yoon
Webtoons optimize interactivity and participation of media users in the world of digital media by consolidating a unique digital culture. This article examines the role of users in interactive media by exploring the case of webtoons in the context of a changing global political economy and cultural dominance. Korean platform monopolies have established a new business model for webtoons and developed
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Bot Versus Humans: Who Can Challenge Corporate Hypocrisy on Social Media? Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-06 Serena Armstrong, Caitlin Neal, Rongwei Tang, Hyejoon Rim, Emily K. Vraga
Social media offer opportunities for companies to promote their image, but companies online also risk being denounced if their actions do not align with their words. The rise of social media bots amplifies this risk, as it becomes possible to automate such efforts to highlight corporate hypocrisy. Our experimental survey demonstrated that bots and human actors who confront a corporation touting their
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The Power of Images: How Multimodal Hate Speech Shapes Prejudice and Prosocial Behavioral Intentions Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-06 Sai Wang
While online hate speech has become a serious problem in multimedia environments, most studies in this area have examined text-based hateful content, with less attention paid to its other visual aspects. From a multimodal perspective, we conducted an online experiment ( N = 799) to investigate how multimodal hate speech (i.e., text and images presented together to convey hateful meanings) on social
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How Migrants Experience Information Uncertainty and Vulnerability: Lessons for (Dis)information Studies Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-30 Ignacio Siles, María Fernanda Salas, Silvio Waisbord
This article develops a phenomenological approach to examine the intersection of global migration and rising concerns about disinformation. Drawing on interviews with Venezuelans en route to the United States-Mexico border through Central America, the article analyzes how undocumented migrants live amid information precarity, how they relate to disinformation, and how disinformation affects their decisions
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Disinformation and the Ghost of Margaret Sanger Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-28 Sarah Whitmarsh
This study sought to investigate the prominence of U.S. birth control pioneer and eugenicist Margaret Sanger in social media discourse through a critical disinformation studies lens. Using computational and qualitative analysis techniques, 60 months of public Facebook posts and Google search data were analyzed to explore the scope, reach, and engagement with messages that reference Sanger and examine
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What You Perceive Is What You Get: Enhancing Rumor-Combating Effectiveness on Social Media Based on Elaboration Likelihood Model Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-28 Cheng Zhou, Qian Chang
Rumors spread on social media overshadow the truth and trigger public panic. One effective countermeasure to address this issue is online rumor-combating. However, its effectiveness on social media has not been fully verified. In this study, drawing on construal level theory, we use temporal distance—the time interval between a rumor-combating post being released and receiving responses from social
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Conversation-Related Advertising and Electronic Eavesdropping: Mapping Perceptions of Phones Listening for Advertising in the United States, the Netherlands, and Poland Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-28 Claire M. Segijn, Joanna Strycharz, Anna Turner, Suzanna J. Opree
People report receiving ads on their mobile device that are seemingly related to previous offline conversations (i.e., conversation-related advertising). They may think that this is because their electronic devices are eavesdropping (i.e., e-eavesdropping). To gain insights into the scope and characteristics of conversation-related advertising and e-eavesdropping beliefs, we conducted a survey in the
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It’s Fine If Others Do It Too: Privacy Concerns, Social Influence, and Political Expression on Facebook in Canada, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-28 Christian Pieter Hoffmann, Shelley Boulianne
Political expression is a focal point for understanding how digital media have transformed political engagement. Privacy concerns tend to impede online political expression, but this relationship is still poorly understood. Based on the theory of reasoned action, this study focuses on the role of social influence and institutional privacy concerns in political expression on Facebook. We draw on research
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Biased Social Media Debates About Terrorism? A Content Analysis of Journalistic Coverage of and Audience Reactions to Terrorist Attacks on YouTube Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-25 Liane Rothenberger, Valerie Hase
Social media are an important source of news during crises such as terrorist attacks. However, how news media and their audiences make sense of terrorism on social media is subject to bias, for example, given their differential treatment of terrorism by right-wing versus Islamist extremist perpetrators. In this study, we analyze how incident- and perpetrator-related characteristics of terrorist attacks
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Decoding Online Narratives and Unraveling Complexities in the Rohingya Refugee Crisis Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-18 Tanvir Ahammad, Siam Ahmed, Selina Sharmin
The Rohingya refugee crisis, a humanitarian tribulation involving the persecution of the Rohingya Muslim ethnic minority group in Myanmar, has led to a massive exodus of refugees, primarily women and children, to neighboring Bangladesh. Analyzing public opinion toward the Rohingya crisis poses a challenge due to the time complexity of manually assessing individual expressions from the vast amount of
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The Listening Public in Public Diplomacy: How Did the Public Respond to President Zelensky on Twitter? Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-17 Lassi Rikkonen, Pekka Isotalus
This exploratory study focuses on the public as a listening ensemble that takes part in public diplomacy on Twitter. Here, listening is considered as the receiving component of communication, and responsive behavior as its visible product. The focus is on public communication that followed Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. A total of 4,392 quote tweets (citing the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky’s
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The Ethoses of (Dis)Connecting with Friends on Social Media: Digital Cocooning and Entrepreneurial Networking among People with Eating Disorders Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-08 Paula Saukko, Helen Malson, Anna Brown
Recent media studies conversations on disconnection or reducing mainly the quantity of engagement with social media so as to enhance well-being have suggested that these practices articulate a contemporary spirit focused on self-care and performance (productivity) that does not consider others or collective solutions. Drawing on and pushing forward disconnection research, we put forward a Foucauldian
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Visualizing Authority: Rise of the Religious Influencers on the Instagram Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-08 Harry Febrian
Roles of various social media influencers—ranging from health and beauty to security—in our society have increasingly become essential topics in the study of social media. However, little is known about the rise of religious influencers in the Global South and the way they negotiate the idea of religious authority in today’s society. To address this gap, this study investigates the way in which religious
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The Influence of BookTok on Literary Criticisms and Diversity Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-08 Alysia De Melo
BookTok, a TikTok community where creators discuss and review books, influences the publishing industry as books that gain popularity on TikTok have seen mainstream success. BookTok is believed to be a diverse space where stories about marginalized identities are celebrated. This is in opposition to the traditional publishing world that is dominated by White, heterosexual, cis-gendered men. However
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Assessing the Extent and Types of Hate Speech in Fringe Communities: A Case Study of Alt-Right Communities on 8chan, 4chan, and Reddit Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-05 Diana Rieger, Anna Sophie Kümpel, Maximilian Wich, Toni Kiening, Georg Groh
Recent right-wing extremist terrorists were active in online fringe communities connected to the alt-right movement. Although these are commonly considered as distinctly hateful, racist, and misogynistic, the prevalence of hate speech in these communities has not been comprehensively investigated yet, particularly regarding more implicit and covert forms of hate. This study exploratively investigates
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My Data, My Choice? Privacy, Commodity Activism, and Big Tech’s Corporatization of Care in the Post-Roe Era Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-30 Zelly Martin, Dominique Montiel Valle, Samantha Shorey
After the Dobbs decision ended federal abortion protection in the United States, experts raised concerns about digital data collected from people seeking abortions. U.S. technology corporations—Google, Apple, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon—were conspicuously silent. Instead, GAMMA (Google, Apple, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon) released statements and/or policies surrounding commitments to data privacy seemingly
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“What You Post in the Group Stays in the Group”: Examining the Affordances of Bounded Social Media Places Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-30 Pranav Malhotra
This study focuses on the affordances of bounded social media places (BSMPs), low visibility places within social media platforms like private messaging and private groups. While researchers have focused on BSMPs within specific platforms, this study presents a systematic examination of BSMPs across multiple platforms to facilitate theoretical durability. Interviews with users of BSMPs across diverse
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Social Media, Psychological Distance, and Environmental Collective Action in Peru Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-30 Fernando Ruiz-Dodobara, Karla A. Uribe-Bravo, Luis Miguel Escurra Mayaute
This research aims to analyze the chain-mediated effect of the different types of psychological distances (social, temporal, spatial, and probability) and the variables of the Social Identity Model of Collective Action (SIMCA) on the relationship between the use of social media and violent environmental collective action. The study sample consisted of 650 university students ( M = 20.8, SD = 2.74)
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Game Over? Using (Not So) Innovative Interventions to Increase Digital Campaign Competence Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-28 Sophie Minihold, Sophie Lecheler, Claes de Vreese, Sanne Kruikemeier
Data-driven political campaigning strategies often remain a black box for citizens; however, educational interventions provide a means to enhance understanding, conscious evaluations, and skills. In this context, we term this combination digital campaign competence (DCC). We conducted an online pre-registered experiment in Austria ( N = 553) using a 2 × 2 between-subject design to compare intervention
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Out With the Hero: How TikTok Everyday Stories Are Re-writing the Arctic Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-26 Arielle Frenette, Mélanie Millette, Caroline Desbiens
With the rapid growth of TikTok in the last few years, we have seen the emergence of global influencers from diverse backgrounds, whose popularity is enhanced by TikTok’s specific content-based algorithm. In North America, the meta-hashtag #NativeTikTok has become a sharing space for a diverse Indigenous online community. Among these, several young Inuit women have acquired a large fanbase, allowing
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Cyber Activism in Iran: A Case Study Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-25 Afsane Danesh, Seyyed Hossein Athari
One of the most obvious characteristics of Iran’s protests in September 2022 is the emergence of a type of cyber activism that, unlike mass activism, is formed first in cyberspace. Networks have redefined social action and structure in our societies and have important consequences on production processes, power, and culture, challenging political systems, and creating legitimacy crises. The subject
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Being a “Global Music Platform”: Platform Work in Light-Tech Capitalism Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-23 Loïc Riom
While the literature on music digital platforms has focused mainly on the consequences of production and consumption, few works have looked at platformization from the perspective of companies active in the music business. Drawing on an ethnographic inquiry of Sofar Sounds—a London-based company that organizes intimate and secret concerts in unconventional spaces—I introduce platform work to explore
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Young Black American Women’s Social Media Use and Online Victimization Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-23 Alexandria C. Onuoha, Sara Matsuzaka, Alexis G. Stanton, Vanessa V. Volpe, Lanice R. Avery
Despite young Black women’s high rates of social media use and risks for victimization at the nexus of sexism and racism, the relationship between these variables remains under researched in this segment. We surveyed 354 Black American women aged 18–30 to explore the associations between two aspects of social media use—time spent daily on social media platforms (i.e., Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat
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Disability Expertise and Large Language Models: A Qualitative Study of Autistic TikTok Creators’ Use of ChatGPT Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-17 Kellan McNally, Kathryn Wright, Lauri Goldkind, Shanna K. Kattari, Bryan G. Victor
The purpose of this study was to describe how autistic TikTok creators are using ChatGPT across various domains of their lives, their motivations for doing so, and resulting impacts. Using a framework of “disability expertise,” we document the knowledge that creators acquired through use of ChatGPT and then shared with peers via social media. We used deductive qualitative methods to analyze 25 TikTok
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Mediated Sexual and Romantic Learning on TikTok: The Dating Wrapped Trend Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-17 Emily A. Mendelson, Jacob Kenton Smith
The Dating Wrapped trend on TikTok takes inspiration from Spotify’s annual Wrapped event where Spotify users are presented with their year-end listening statistics. Dating Wrapped repackages fundamental components of Spotify’s Wrapped—a focus on aesthetics, PowerPoint-like presentation of information, and quantification of personal experiences—but does so in the context of interpersonal relationships
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Empowered or Constrained in Platform Governance? An Analysis of Twitter Users’ Responses to Elon Musk’s Takeover Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-14 Rui Wang, Yini Zhang, Jiyoun Suk, Sara Holland Levin
Centering on social media’s public- and profit-oriented nature, this study theorizes how social media users are empowered and constrained when participating in platform governance through user-initiated expressions on platforms. The empirical analysis focuses on user responses before and after Elon Musk’s official acquisition of Twitter, utilizing cluster analysis and topic modeling to examine the
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Online Disinhibition, Normative Hostility, and Banal Toxicity: Young People’s Negative Online Gaming Conduct Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-14 Mikko Meriläinen, Maria Ruotsalainen
In this study, we examine young people’s self-reported negative (“toxic”) online gaming conduct via a qualitative survey ( N = 95) of active game players aged 15–25 in Finland. Drawing from young people’s lived experiences, we present negative gaming conduct as a complex whole, stemming from a combination of online disinhibition, affective intensity, game cultural conduct norms, and individual preferences
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Digital Battlegrounds: The Interplay of Social Media, State Power, and Influencers in Türkiye’s Earthquake Response Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-14 Duygu Karataş, Mine Gencel Bek
This study examines the critical role of Twitter (X) in crisis communication during the earthquake that struck Türkiye on 6 February 2023, focusing on how two prominent influencers, Haluk Levent and Oğuzhan Uğur, effectively utilized the platform in response to the disaster. Analysis of highly retweeted posts and engagement rates for tweets collected using related keywords—“ahbap,” “babalatv,” “haluklevent
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“The Future Is Bright! Is It?”: Investigating Effects of Hopeful Mental Health Content and Endorsement Cues on Social Media Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-14 Elien Beelen, Kathrin Karsay
Mental health content on social media usually highlights positive emotions, especially hope. This article presents an experimental study on the effects of hopeful social media posts on Instagram. Drawing on appraisal theory and the phenomenon of spillover effects, we developed a 2 × 2 between-subjects post-test experiment, where we manipulated the message type (i.e., hope message vs. control condition)
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Refugees’ Storytelling Strategies on Digital Media Platforms: How the Russia–Ukraine War Unfolded on TikTok Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-10 Sara Marino
The article discusses how TikTok has emerged as a platform for self-representation and political contestation during the Russia–Ukraine war. Shortly after the beginning of the conflict, journalists and broadcasters have begun to associate the events unfolding in those countries with the widespread use of this platform among young content creators, refugees, soldiers, and civilians. Described as the
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How to Spark Joy: Strategies of Depoliticization in Platform’s Corporate Social Initiatives Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-10 Rebecca Scharlach
Despite social media companies’ public commitments to do good, they regularly face international criticism. This article explores how platforms engage in corporate public relations campaigns to negotiate social and political responsibilities. Through a qualitative analysis of the values promoted in the social initiative TikTok for Good, I show how TikTok promotes messages that amplify positivity, minimize
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Live Free and Die: How Social Media Amplify Populist Vaccine Resistance Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-10 Andrew Rojecki, Viki Askounis Conner, Peter Royal
The COVID-19 pandemic led to over one million American deaths, disproportionately suffered by those who resisted vaccination by championing individual autonomy over the collective good. The article takes as its point of departure that vaccine resistance is a recurring phenomenon in U.S. history with multiple origins. Among these are the absence of a consistent approach to public health policy—the combined
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The Process of Personal Social Media for Work: Unveiling the “Work” Behind Social Media Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-09 Stephanie L. Dailey, Madeline Martinson
Many employees are engaging in personal social media for work (PSMW), which involves posting work-related content from a user’s individual social-media account. Despite quantitative studies demonstrating the presence and outcomes of talking about work on social media, scholars know little about the process of using PSMW. To fill this gap, the current study uses social identity theory and boundary theory
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Managing the Pandemic in Digitized Spaces: Assessing the Social Media Approaches of Scandinavian Public Health Authorities Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-07 Anna Elisabeth Hasselström, Anders Olof Larsson
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, health- and civil-contingency agencies—referred to here as public health authorities (PHAs)—in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark turned to social media to disseminate pandemic recommendations and information. This study explores the social media crisis management strategies employed by Scandinavian PHAs. Specifically, we apply a multiplatform research approach to assess
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More Than Meets the Reply: Examining Emotional Belonging in Far-Right Social Media Space Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-29 Jonathan Collins
This article challenges prevailing assumptions that fringe social media platforms predominantly serve as unmoderated hate-filled spaces for far-right communication by examining the userbase’s emotional connection to these environments. Focusing on Gab Social, a popular alternative technology website with affordances akin to Twitter, Facebook, and Reddit, and its subgroup, “Introduce Yourself,” the
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Digital Access, Digital Literacy, and Afterlife Preparedness: Societal Contexts of Digital Afterlife Traces Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Lance Yong Jin Park, Yu Won Oh, Yoonmo Sang
This study aims to evaluate how individuals are prepared to cope with or plan for their afterlife digital footprints, by examining how (1) access, (2) literacy, and (3) preparedness for digital afterlife work in concert to influence one’s wellbeing. We found the indirect relationship between access and wellbeing and the influence of digital literacy on wellbeing was indirect, illustrating that the
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Valuing Trans Lives After Suicide: Rituals of Commemoration in Digital Social Media Culture Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Joe Edward Hatfield
In 2014, a trans teenager named Leelah Alcorn posted a suicide letter to her public Tumblr account. Almost a decade later, in 2023, Eden Knight, another young trans woman, posted a suicide letter to her public Twitter account. Both suicide letters went viral and inspired memorial hashtags on the platforms where they initially circulated. In this article, I identify similarities between the cases, conceptualizing
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Playful Trauma: TikTok Creators and the Use of the Platformed Body in Times of War Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Tom Divon, Moa Eriksson Krutrök
Amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine, TikTok has emerged as a pivotal platform, where creators utilize its compressed video formats to mediate the harsh realities of war zones. In this article, we examine 97 videos produced by 12 Ukrainian and Russian TikTok creators in response to the 2022 war in Ukraine. We focus on the playful embodiment of trauma using digital ethnography, analyzing creators’ practices
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“I Can Choose to be a Good Man Even if I Got a Raw Deal”: Neoliberal Heteromasculinity as Manosphere Counter Narrative in r/Stoicism Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 Marcus Maloney, Callum Jones, Steven Roberts
This article provides findings from our dual-computational/qualitative analysis of r/Stoicism, a large subreddit in which self-presenting boys and men seek Stoic philosophical advice on various life matters. In choosing to investigate this decidedly (hetero)masculinized online space in which users share their anxieties and grievances, we expected to find substantial evidence of “toxic” manosphere-style
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“#My Place Isn’t in the Kitchen”: Examining Feminist Facebook Framing of an Algerian Social Movement Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-23 Rim H. Chaif, Teri Finneman
This study examines the dynamics of a social media campaign launched by Algerian feminists in 2018 in response to a video shared on Facebook that narrated a woman’s upsetting encounter with harassment. This movement occurred in a region often known for its autocratic systems of governance and the prevalence of its Islamic movements rather than for its prominence of feminist advocacy. Yet the Global
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Educating Cancer on TikTok: Expanding Online Self-Disclosure of Cancer Patients Social Media + Society (IF 5.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-22 Magdalena Pluta, Piotr Siuda
The article uses the concept of online self-disclosure and examines whether TikTok videos reveal information similar to what is reported in existing research on social media within this field. In addition, the study aims to identify the creators’ motivations and the meanings they attribute to disclosing cancer and asks whether this disclosure challenges or supports the concept of a positive culture