Academic Journal

The politics of platform folklore: Emotion, identity, and sense-making in far-right populist Twitter communities

Bibliographic Details
Title: The politics of platform folklore: Emotion, identity, and sense-making in far-right populist Twitter communities
Authors: Junman, Alice
Source: Media Culture and Society. 47(2):302-318
Subject Terms: content moderation, emotion, far-right, folklore, online activism, platform affordances, populism, Twitter, Sociologi, Sociology, Statskunskap, Political Science
Description: Platforms are increasingly part of everyday life, but they remain opaque and impenetrable spaces for most users. To manage life on platforms, users thus need to engage with sense-making practices that help them understand and navigate online spaces. This paper studies how far-right populist activists interpret and navigate their presence on Twitter, using the concept of platform folklore, that is, unofficial and collective narratives aimed at relieving feelings of uncertainty associated with the opacity of platforms. The data consists of 20 life-history interviews with Swedish and American Twitter activists from right-wing populist communities, who all participated in populist Twitter debates. The analysis shows how platform folklore is constructed not only based on observations of content moderation, as emphasized in previous research, but also in correspondence with the political ideology and identities of the activists. This led them to interpret Twitter as a leftist organization that disfavored them, which stopped them from developing strategies to reach the goals they held as central to their Twitter activism. The paper concludes by discussing the role of emotions and ideology in platform folklore within political communities and suggesting directions for future research.
File Description: electronic
Access URL: https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-542386
https://doi.org/10.1177/01634437241282916
Database: SwePub
Description
ISSN:01634437
DOI:10.1177/01634437241282916