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https://doi.org/10.17645/mac.v11i1.6058

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The Multilingual Twitter Discourse on Vaccination in Germany During the Covid-19 Pandemic

[journal article]

Schmid-Petri, Hannah
Bürger, Moritz
Schlögl, Stephan
Schwind, Mara
Mitrović, Jelena
Kühn, Ramona

Abstract

There is evidence that specific segments of the population were hit particularly hard by the Covid-19 pandemic (e.g., people with a migration background). In this context, the impact and role played by online platforms in facilitating the integration or fragmentation of public debates and social gro... view more

There is evidence that specific segments of the population were hit particularly hard by the Covid-19 pandemic (e.g., people with a migration background). In this context, the impact and role played by online platforms in facilitating the integration or fragmentation of public debates and social groups is a recurring topic of discussion. This is where our study ties in, we ask: How is the topic of vaccination discussed and evaluated in different language communities in Germany on Twitter during the Covid-19 pandemic? We collected all tweets in German, Russian, Turkish, and Polish (i.e., the largest migrant groups in Germany) in March 2021 that included the most important keywords related to Covid-19 vaccination. All users were automatically geocoded. The data was limited to tweets from Germany. Our results show that the multilingual debate on Covid-19 vaccination in Germany does not have many structural connections. However, in terms of actors, arguments, and positions towards Covid-19 vaccination, the discussion in the different language communities is similar. This indicates that there is a parallelism of the debates but no social-discursive integration.... view less

Keywords
twitter; epidemic; content analysis; vaccination; Federal Republic of Germany; multilingualism; fragmentation

Classification
Media Contents, Content Analysis
Interactive, electronic Media

Free Keywords
Covid-19; multilingual communities; vaccination debate

Document language
English

Publication Year
2023

Page/Pages
p. 293-305

Journal
Media and Communication, 11 (2023) 1

Issue topic
Science Communication in the Digital Age: New Actors, Environments, and Practices

ISSN
2183-2439

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.