Networked Gatekeeping and Networked Framing on #Egypt

Sharon MERAZ, Zizi PAPACHARISSI Translated by CHEN Yu

Chinese Journal of Journalism & Communication ›› 2015, Vol. 37 ›› Issue (9) : 80-108.

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PDF(3657 KB)
Chinese Journal of Journalism & Communication ›› 2015, Vol. 37 ›› Issue (9) : 80-108.

Networked Gatekeeping and Networked Framing on #Egypt

  • Sharon Meraz is an assistant professor at the Department of Communication at the University of Illinois-Chicago. Zizi Papacharissi (corresponding author) is a professor and Head of the Department of Communication at the University of Illinois-Chicago.
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Abstract

This study traces the rhythms of news storytelling on Twitter via the #egypt hashtag. Using computational discourse analysis, we examine news values and the form of news exhibited in #egypt from January 25 to February 25, 2011, pre- and post-resignation of Hosni Mubarak. Results point to a hybridity of old and newer news values, with emphasis on the drama of instantaneity, the crowdsourcing of elites, solidarity, and ambience. The resulting stream of news combines news, opinion, and emotion to the point where discerning one from the other is difficult and doing so misses the point. We offer a theory of affective news to explain the distinctive character of content produced by networked publics in times of political crisis.

Key words

network gatekeeping / networked framing / Twitter politics / affect / social networks

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Sharon MERAZ, Zizi PAPACHARISSI Translated by CHEN Yu. Networked Gatekeeping and Networked Framing on #Egypt[J]. Chinese Journal of Journalism & Communication. 2015, 37(9): 80-108
PDF(3657 KB)

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