NOVOTNÁ, Martina a Lenka VOCHOCOVÁ. Political Information and Conspiracy Narratives in the Online Civic Discourse of Global Crises. In ECPR General Conference. 2024.
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Základní údaje
Originální název Political Information and Conspiracy Narratives in the Online Civic Discourse of Global Crises
Autoři NOVOTNÁ, Martina a Lenka VOCHOCOVÁ.
Vydání ECPR General Conference, 2024.
Další údaje
Originální jazyk angličtina
Typ výsledku Prezentace na konferencích
Stát vydavatele Irsko
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
WWW URL
Organizace Fakulta sociálních studií – Masarykova univerzita – Repozitář
Klíčová slova anglicky Civil Society; Elites; Media; Populism; Identity; Social Media; Communication; Narratives
Návaznosti LX22NPO5101, projekt VaV.
Změnil Změnil: RNDr. Daniel Jakubík, učo 139797. Změněno: 6. 9. 2024 00:50.
Anotace
Crisis times are connected with an increased level of fear and uncertainty, emphasising the importance of online discussion environments, which can provide participants with opportunities to share their frustrations and find communities with which they can share such fears and their political views. Both positive (uncertainty reduction) and negative (higher societal division, conspiracy narratives spreading) consequences are connected with such online discursive communities. Social media gives rise to the rapid dissemination of information, including false information, particularly during global crises. Conspiracies may be trusted more due to the urgent need for information, which might exacerbate the situation and cause unnecessary panic. In our paper, we aim to analyse what metanarratives help Czech citizens deal with unexpected crisis situations, namely the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russo-Ukrainian war, and the consequences of these crises for the discussants’ economic situation and autonomy. We analysed online discussions on Facebook pages of mainstream TV news to identify common patterns across both crises. We were specifically interested in how possible societal division and power inequalities are reflected in the dominant online metanarratives and in what forms and context the discussants express the perceived economic and social uncertainties. Our focus is on exploring to what extent populist rhetoric, such as the division between the people and the elites, distrust in official information and conspiracy theories, play a role in building perceptions of ongoing situations. Our study focused on the public Facebook pages of two major Czech TV stations, the ČT24, a public service broadcaster, and TN.CZ, a commercial medium. We collected data during the first wave of each crisis (COVID-19: 2020; Russo-Ukrainian war 2022) and one year after. We have selected seven top-performing Facebook posts related to crisis per discussion arena and a time slot for each crisis, sorted comments with the highest engagement, and coded 30 relevant comments regarding our research aim at each FB post. 1,680 comments in total were analysed, employing the grounded theory's open and axial coding procedures. Preliminary findings indicate that online discussants use repetitive metanarratives to articulate their low trust in information distributed by the media and political actors. People express their worries regarding the impact of governmental policies in crisis times on the domestic economy and on the personal freedom or opportunities of vulnerable members of society (children, economically marginalised, etc.). The media are frequent targets of dissatisfaction represented in the metanarratives as part of the ruling elites misinforming the citizens. Conspiracy theories appear in the comments across both types of crises (health and security) as expressions of civic dissatisfaction with the government measures perceived as the rule over the people, thus supporting discourses of civil disobedience. People claim that they need to take things into their own hands to protect themselves and their vulnerable. The implications of these repetitive narratives activated during crisis times for policymakers regarding crisis communication, as well as interpretations of the possible sources of low trust in official information, are further discussed.
Typ Název Vložil/a Vloženo Práva
ECPR_conference_24_Official_Lies.pdf   Verze souboru 6. 9. 2024

Vlastnosti

Název
ECPR_conference_24_Official_Lies.pdf
Adresa v ISu
https://repozitar.cz/auth/repo/63386/1809385/
Adresa ze světa
https://repozitar.cz/repo/63386/1809385/
Adresa do Správce
https://repozitar.cz/auth/repo/63386/1809385/?info
Ze světa do Správce
https://repozitar.cz/repo/63386/1809385/?info
Vloženo
Pá 6. 9. 2024 00:50

Práva

Právo číst
  • kdokoliv v Internetu
Právo vkládat
 
Právo spravovat
  • osoba RNDr. Daniel Jakubík, uco 139797
  • osoba Mgr. Eva Zárybnická, DiS., uco 206552
  • osoba Mgr. Jolana Surýnková, uco 220973
  • osoba Mgr. Michal Maňas, uco 2481
Atributy
 
Vytisknout
Přidat do schránky Zobrazeno: 27. 9. 2024 09:27