This volume provides a comprehensive analysis of the ways in which digital communication facilitate and inform discourses of legitimization and delegitimization in contemporary participatory cultures. The book draws on multiple theoretical traditions from critical discourse analysis to allow for a greater critical engagement of the ways in which values are either justified or criticized on social media platforms across a variety of social milieus, including the personal, political, religious, corporate, and commercial. The volume highlights data from across ten national contexts and a range of online platforms to demonstrate how these discursive practices manifest themselves differently across a range of settings. Taken together, the seventeen chapters in this book offer a more informed understanding of how these discursive spaces help us to interpret the manner in which digital communication can be used to legitimize or delegitimize, making this book an ideal resource for students and scholars in discourse analysis, sociolinguistics, new media, and media production.
This volume provides a comprehensive analysis of the ways in which digital communication facilitate and inform discourses of legitimization and delegitimization in contemporary participatory cultures.
Introduction: (De)Legitimization and Participation in the Digitized Public Sphere
Andrew S. Ross and Damian J. Rivers
Part I: Participatory Language Use Online and Discursive Positioning
Chapter 1: (De)Legitimizing Language Uses in Language Ideological Debates Online
Antonio Reyes
Chapter 2: Persuasion by Commonality: Legitimizing Actions through Discourse on Common Sense in a Japanese Advice Forum
Giancarla Unser-Schutz
Chapter 3: A Name Rightly Given? The Use, Abuse, and Adoption of the Term "Cybernat" During the Scottish Referendum Debate
Rowan R. Mackay
Chapter 4: Online Performances of Expertise by Sustainability Practitioners: Tracing Communicative Episodes of Professional (De)Legitimization
Rahul Mitra
Part II: Discursive (De)Legitimization through Social Media Participation
Chapter 5: ‘Stop the Boats’: Internet Memes as Case Study of Multimodal Delegitimization of Australian Refugee Policy Rhetoric
Andrew S. Ross
Chapter 6: Understanding Participatory Culture through Hashtag Activism after the Orlando Pulse Tragedy
Nicholas DeArmas, Jennifer Roth Miller, Wendy Givoglu, David Thomas Moran and Stephanie Vie
Chapter 7: Digital Narratives of Struggle and Legitimacy in the Arab Spring
Aditi Bhatia
Chapter 8: Not the Desired Offspring: #FertilityDay, the Italian Ministry of Health, and the Campaign that Wasn’t
Tommaso Trillò
Chapter 9: Nike Y U No Do It Yourself: Decrowning Brands by Means of Memes
Vittorio Montieri
Part III: (De)Legitimization in Production, Participation and Performance
Chapter 10: Always On, But Never There: Political Parody, the Carnivalesque, and the Rise of the ‘Nectorate’
Annamaria Neag and Richard Berger
Chapter 11: Trolling as Creative Insurgency: The Carnivalesque Delegitimization of Putin and His Supporters in Online Newspaper Commentary
Alla V. Tovares
Chapter 12: Political Cartoons as Creative Insurgency: Delegitimization in the Culture of Convergence
Damian J. Rivers
Chapter 13: Participation That Makes a Difference and Differences in Participation: Highrise – An Interactive Documentary Project for Change
Anna Wiehl
Chapter 14: Film Festival Participation and Identity Formation: Non-Professional Creativity and the Pleasures of Mobile Filmmaking
Gavin Wilson
Part IV: (De)Legitimizing Participatory Discourses of Religion
Chapter 15: Modding as a Strategy to (De)Legitimize Representations of Religion in the Civilization Game Franchise
Stefan Werning
Chapter 16: Identity, Social Media and Religion: (De)Legitimization of Identity Construction through the Language of Religion
Soudeh Ghaffari