Performing politics on social media: the dramaturgy of an environmental controversy on Facebook
Date
Authors
Hendriks, Carolyn
Duus, Sonya
Ercan, Selen A.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Abstract
Social media has become an important stage for environmental politics where
different actors seek to shape and contest meanings. Meaning making on
social media is studied through an empirical study of a controversial coal seam
gas project in Australia. Key Facebook pages associated with opposing viewpoints
on this controversy are analyzed using the dramaturgical concepts of
scripting and staging. The analysis reveals that the Facebook performances are
multisensory, staged to appear personal, and tightly scripted. It is argued that
although these characteristics serve an important solidarity function among
like-minded individuals and groups, they leave limited space or tolerance for
counter-scripts. This in-depth empirical analysis suggests that social media
platforms are transforming the way publics form and meet, but their capacity
to bridge opposing viewpoints on divisive issues remains limited.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Environmental Politics
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access