"眼泪从未为任何人赢得自由:"对乌克兰在全球规模的宣传战中使用备忘录的多模态话语分析

Mark A. Poepsel, Andrew Malo, Chinedu Obuekwe, Mikayla Wilhelm, Valquiria Perea Góngora, David Daiber
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文分析了@Ukraine在X(前身为Twitter)上发布的备忘录,从2016年账户成立到2023年9月,以研究备忘录作为全球冲突中宣传工具的功能和效用。 一个小型研究小组对 100 多条备忘录进行了多模态话语分析,以探索性的方式将备忘录分为不同的主题类别。然后,研究小组的一小部分成员对特意挑选出的少数记忆媒体中的图片和文字进行了递归分析,以确定其中存在哪些类型的意识形态诉求。 我们的研究结果与之前的研究结果一致,即网络流行语可能被用来加强民族团结,也可能被用来向富裕、强大的盟友(这里指西方国家)寻求同情。乌克兰方面的基本宣传理念是民主、友谊和独立,而俄罗斯则被诬陷为独裁政权。 我们论文中提到的一小部分备忘录引起了全球媒体的关注。虽然我们并没有对本文所研究的主题的广泛媒体效应做出任何声明,但吸引美国主要出版物的关注显然是其中一些主题的目标。对于那些希望找到一个国家宣传战略的秘诀的人来说,其社交媒体备忘录是一个很好的起点。 从这项研究中可以明显看出,政府可能会利用备忘录来覆盖其所有的宣传基础。乌克兰的备忘录似乎主要是为了强化民族团结的信息和与西方联系的信息。 虽然其他人也研究过 @ 乌克兰的推文,但本研究被认为是首次专门研究发布在推特上的memes。这项研究对我们了解千变万化的流行语如何传达宣传战略的核心理念做出了重要贡献,也许我们只是希望少数流行语能 "击中 "所需的媒体渠道,哪怕只是为了加强宣传力度。
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“Tears have never won anyone freedom:” a multimodal discourse analysis of Ukraine’s use of memes in a propaganda war of global scale
This paper analyzes memes posted by @Ukraine to X, formerly known as Twitter, from the account’s inception in 2016 through September 2023 to examine the function and utility of memes as tools of propaganda in global conflict. A multimodal discourse analysis of more than 100 memes was conducted by a small research group to separate the memes into thematic categories in an exploratory fashion. Then, a small subset of the research group conducted a recursive analysis on the images and text in a handful of memes selected purposively to determine what types of ideological appeals were present. Our findings align with observations made in previous studies that internet memes might be used to bolster national unity and might be employed to bolster pleas for sympathy from wealthy, more powerful allies, in this case in the West. The essential propaganda ideals were those of democracy, friendship, and independence on the side of Ukraine while Russia is framed as a dictatorship. A small number of the memes referenced in our paper garnered global media attention. Though we do not make any claims about broad media effects relating to the memes studied here, garnering the attention of major U.S. publication seems clearly to have been a goal of some of these memes. For those who wish to find a key to the playbook for a nation’s propaganda strategy, its social media memes are a great place to begin. It is apparent in this study that governments might use memes to cover all their propaganda bases, so to speak. Ukraine’s memes appear to serve mainly to reinforce messages of national unity and messages of connection with the West. Though others have studied @Ukraine’s tweets, this is believed to be the first to focus exclusively on memes posted to the feed. This study makes a significant contribution to our understanding of how wildly varied memes can communicate core concepts of a propaganda strategy, perhaps with the hope that a few will “hit” with desired media outlets, if only to bolster propaganda efforts.
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来源期刊
Online Media and Global Communication
Online Media and Global Communication Communication, Media Studies, Internet Studies, International Studies, International Relations-
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期刊介绍: Online Media and Global Communication (OMGC) is a new venue for high quality articles on theories and methods about the role of online media in global communication. This journal is sponsored by the Center for Global Public Opinion Research of China and School of Journalism and Communication, Shanghai International Studies University, China. It is published solely online in English. The journal aims to serve as an academic bridge in the research of online media and global communication between the dominating English-speaking world and the non-English speaking world that has remained mostly invisible due to language barriers. Through its structured abstracts for all research articles and uniform keyword system in the United Nations’ official six languages plus Japanese and German (Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian, Spanish, Japanese, and German), the journal provides a highly accessible platform to users worldwide. Its unique dual track single-blind and double-blind review system facilitates manuscript reviews with different levels of author identities. OMGC publishes review essays on the state-of-the-art in online media and global communication research in different countries and regions, original research papers on topics related online media and global communication and translated articles from non-English speaking Global South. It strives to be a leading platform for scientific exchange in online media and global communication. For events and more, consider following us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/OMGCJOURNAL. Topics OMGC publishes high quality, innovative and original research on global communication especially in the use of global online media platforms such as Facebook, TikTok, YouTube, Twitter, Instagram, WhatsApp, Weibo, WeChat, Wikipedia, web sites, blogs, etc. This journal will address the contemporary concerns about the effects and operations of global digital media platforms on international relations, international public opinion, fake news and propaganda dissemination, diaspora communication, consumer behavior as well as the balance of voices in the world. Comparative research across countries are particularly welcome. Empirical research is preferred over conceptual papers. Article Formats In addition to the standard research article format, the Journal includes the following formats: ● One translation paper selected from Non-English Journals that with high quality as “Gems from the Global South” per issue ● One review essay on current state of research in online media and global communication in a country or region
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