Download full text
(external source)
Citation Suggestion
Please use the following Persistent Identifier (PID) to cite this document:
https://doi.org/10.17645/mac.v8i4.3164
Exports for your reference manager
Political Opinion Formation as Epistemic Practice: The Hashtag Assemblage of #metwo
[journal article]
Abstract
The article contributes to the literature on the political use of hashtags. We argue that hashtag assemblages could be understood in the tradition of representing public opinion through datafication in the context of democratic politics. While traditional data-based epistemic practices like polls le... view more
The article contributes to the literature on the political use of hashtags. We argue that hashtag assemblages could be understood in the tradition of representing public opinion through datafication in the context of democratic politics. While traditional data-based epistemic practices like polls lead to the ‘passivation’ of citizens, in the digital constellation this tendency is currently challenged. In media like Twitter, hashtags serve as a technical operator to order the discursive fabrication of diverse publicly articulated opinions that manifest in the assemblage of tweets, algorithms and criticisms. We conceptualize such a critical public as an epistemic sensorium for dislocations based on the expression of experienced social imbalances and its political amplification. On the level of opinion formation, this constitutes a process of democratization, allowing for the expression of diverse opinions and issues even under singular hashtags. Despite this diversity, we see a strong tendency of publicly relevant actors such as news outlets to represent digital forms of opinion expression as unified movements. We argue that this tendency can partly be explained by the affordances of networked media, relating the process of objectification to the network position of the observer. We make this argument empirically plausible by applying methods of network analysis and topic modelling to a dataset of 196,987 tweets sampled via the hashtag #metwo that emerged in the German Twittersphere in the summer of 2018 and united a discourse concerned with racism and identity. In light of this data, we not only demonstrate the hashtag assemblage’s heterogeneity and potential for subaltern agency; we also make visible how hashtag assemblages as epistemic practices are inherently dynamic, distinguishing it from opinion polling through the limited observational capacities and active participation of the actors representing its claims within the hybrid media system.... view less
Keywords
opinion formation; twitter; network analysis; public opinion; Federal Republic of Germany; discourse analysis; racism; identity; social actor
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
#metwo; Twitter analysis; assemblages; big data; datafication; democracy; epistemic practices; hashtag; network analysis; topic modelling
Document language
English
Publication Year
2020
Page/Pages
p. 84-95
Journal
Media and Communication, 8 (2020) 4
Issue topic
The Ongoing Transformation of the Digital Public Sphere
ISSN
2183-2439
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed