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This book explores Twitter communication about the 2016 Brexit referendum in the UK in the run-up to the event. The mixed-method, computational analysis of over twelve million tweets reveals how Twitter worked in shaping political discourse and its potential for fuelling populism in the month leading to the referendum. Our findings show while polarised public opinion was explicitly expressed, populist sentiments were mainstreamed into the debate about the referendum and widely spread on Twitter. Populist politicians, supported by pro-Brexit users, tactically used Twitter to promulgate their populist ideas. In contrast, despite their active use of Twitter, the Remain camp appeared to have misunderstood the mechanisms of Twitter for shaping political discourse. Twitter communication, in this case, showed dangerous potential for reflecting and reinforcing existing social tensions and divisions, being influenced or even manipulated by individuals and interest groups to serve their own interests. It is important to be well aware of this capacity of Twitter for the wellbeing of democracy, especially in the politically turbulent times since 2016 when the UK voted to leave the EU.
Jingrong Tong is Senior Lecturer in Digital News Cultures at the University of Sheffield.Landong Zuo is an IT Consultant, and Data Scientist specialized in data mining, data analysis and Nature Language Processing.
Chapter 1. IntroductionChapter 2. Social Representations of The EU Referendum on TwitterChapter 3. Legitimising Political Controversy and PopulismChapter 4. The Construction of “hero” versus “villain” in Twitter Users’ Responses to @David_Cameron and @Nigel_FarageChapter 5. Shaping Political Discourse: is Twitter Good for Democracy?
Marian Thunnissen, Eva Gallardo-Gallardo, The Netherlands) Thunnissen, Marian (Fontys University of Applied Sciences, Spain) Gallardo-Gallardo, Dr Eva (School of Industrial Engineering of Barcelona, Dr Eva Gallardo-Gallardo
Yujie Chen, Zhifei Mao, Jack Qiu, UK) Chen, Yujie (University of Leicester, China) Mao, Zhifei (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, China) Qiu, Jack (The Chinese University of Hong Kong