ABSTRACT

Discourse and Social Media is a unique and timely collection that breaks ground on how discourse scholars, coming from a range of disciplinary perspectives, can critically analyse different social media, including YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and News. The book fills a gap in the market for a multi-disciplinary collection for analysing the discourse of social media.

In providing a thorough review of the field to date, the opening chapter considers some of the common and divergent interests and priorities that exist in social media discourse analysis. It also discusses the wider methodological and theoretical implications which social media analysis brings to the process of discourse analysis, as new forms of connections and communication call us to re-think the static models that we have been using. The rest of the collection draws on different traditions in discourse studies, including Critical Discourse Analysis, Sociolinguistics, Pragmatics, Foucaultian analysis and Multimodality, to bring several unique approaches to critically analysing social media from a discourse perspective. Each ground-breaking chapter shows how different forms of social media data can best be selected, analysed, and dealt with critically.

As a whole, Discourse and Social Media provides a go-to resource for social media scholars, as well as graduate students. The book is a significant contribution to the development of the field at this present shifting time. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Multicultural Discourses.

chapter 2|1 pages

Social media in political communication

chapter 3|1 pages

Boko Haram

chapter 4|1 pages

Al Shabaab

chapter 5|2 pages

Tweets in radicalist discourse

chapter 6|1 pages

Linguistic features of tweets

chapter 7|1 pages

Stance in discourse

chapter 8|11 pages

Methodology

chapter 10|3 pages

Conclusion

chapter 2|1 pages

Context

chapter 3|1 pages

Theoretical framework

chapter 4|3 pages

Data and methods

chapter 5|9 pages

Findings

chapter 6|2 pages

Conclusions