Winning the discursive struggle? The impact of a significantenvironmental crisis event on dominant climate discourses on Twitter
Journal article
Bednarek, Monika, Ross, Andrew S., Boichak, Olga, Doran, Y. J., Carr, Georgia, Altmann, Eduardo G. and Alexander, Tristram J.. (2022). Winning the discursive struggle? The impact of a significantenvironmental crisis event on dominant climate discourses on Twitter. Discourse, Context and Media. 45, p. Article 100564. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcm.2021.100564
Authors | Bednarek, Monika, Ross, Andrew S., Boichak, Olga, Doran, Y. J., Carr, Georgia, Altmann, Eduardo G. and Alexander, Tristram J. |
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Abstract | The devastating 2019–2020 Australian bushfires attracted significant activity on social media, both in Australia and worldwide. We use corpus-based discourse analysis to explore the impact of this significant environmental crisis event on climate discussions on Australian Twitter, with a focus on discursive struggle and (de-)legitimation. We examine the most-retweeted tweets across three 30-day time periods, combining quantitative and qualitative approaches. Methodologically, we analyse hashtags to identify dominant Twitter discourses in the three phases. We also explore tweets that support or oppose the link between climate change and the fires, and the misleading arson discourse. We use collocation and concordance analysis, developing a new approach to categorising tweets for support and opposition. Results show that the bushfires had a clear impact on dominant Twitter climate discourses, that this intensified at the height of the bushfires, but receded significantly afterwards. Additionally, climate disinformation discourses seem to be a ‘minor’ dominant discourse rather than a ‘major’ dominant discourse in the Twitter datasets under investigation. Our study suggests that discursive legitimation becomes an outcome of discursive struggle; the very act of retweeting a tweet suggesting the bushfire crisis is indicative of the urgent need for broad climate action is, in a sense, contributing to the legitimisation of this discourse and countering the arguments of those who do not see the issues as linked. |
Keywords | corpus linguistics; fires; climate change; Twitter; discursive struggle; legitimation |
Year | 2022 |
Journal | Discourse, Context and Media |
Journal citation | 45, p. Article 100564 |
Publisher | Elsevier Ltd |
ISSN | 2211-6958 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcm.2021.100564 |
Scopus EID | 2-s2.0-85121105799 |
Open access | Published as ‘gold’ (paid) open access |
Research or scholarly | Research |
Page range | 1-13 |
Publisher's version | License File Access Level Open |
Output status | Published |
Publication dates | |
Online | 13 Dec 2021 |
Publication process dates | |
Accepted | 22 Nov 2021 |
Deposited | 06 Jun 2022 |
https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/8xy1x/winning-the-discursive-struggle-the-impact-of-a-significantenvironmental-crisis-event-on-dominant-climate-discourses-on-twitter
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Publisher's version
OA_Bednarek_2022_Winning_the_discursive_struggle_the_impact.pdf | |
License: CC BY 4.0 | |
File access level: Open |
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