Don’t feed the trolls?

Caryn Coatney
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This study applies the concepts of interpretive communities and conversational interactions to show how investigative journalists initiated a relatively new method of reporting and generated support among their colleagues for becoming anti-Nazi activists and troll hunters. It draws on a sample of journalistic reporting and related media items to examine investigative reporters’ self-reflexive acts and the responses of journalism communities in Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States from 2015 to 2020. Investigative journalists initiated open conversations to show that they were enthusiastic activists in retweeting, confronting and quoting neo-Nazi trolling by interviewing the perpetrators. Other journalism communities signified they were pursuing activist-like agendas as they magnified this work through informal networks, social media and news commentaries. Journalists reconsidered their professional boundaries to allow for cooperative conversations about their experiences in a fresh effort to denounce hate speech and begin collective initiatives to enhance social cohesion in civil society.
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不要喂巨魔?
这项研究应用了解释社区和对话互动的概念,展示了调查记者如何开创一种相对较新的报道方法,并在同事中获得支持,成为反纳粹活动家和巨魔猎人。它利用新闻报道和相关媒体项目的样本,考察了2015年至2020年澳大利亚、英国和美国调查记者的自我反射行为以及新闻界的反应。调查记者发起了公开对话,以表明他们是通过采访肇事者来转发、对抗和引用新纳粹诽谤的热情活动家。其他新闻界表示,他们正在通过非正式网络、社交媒体和新闻评论来扩大这项工作,以追求类似活动家的议程。记者们重新考虑了自己的职业界限,以便就自己的经历进行合作对话,以谴责仇恨言论,并开始采取集体行动,增强民间社会的社会凝聚力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: Cosmopolitan Civil Societies: An Interdisciplinary Journal is concerned with developing a better understanding of social change and cultural cohesion in cosmopolitan societies. Its focus lies at the intersection of conflict and cohesion, and in how division can be transformed into dialogue, recognition and inclusion. The Journal takes a grounded approach to cosmopolitanism, linking it to civil society studies. It opens up debate about cosmopolitan engagement in civil societies, addressing a range of sites: social movements and collective action; migration, cultural diversity and responses to racism; the promotion of human rights and social justice; initiatives to strengthen civil societies; the impact of ‘information society’ and the context of environmental change.
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