Digital Memory and Populism: Introduction

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftLederForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Digital Memory and Populism : Introduction. / Menke, Manuel; Hagedoorn, Berber.

I: International Journal of Communication, Bind 17, 1932–8036/20230005, 2023, s. 2101–2112.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftLederForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Menke, M & Hagedoorn, B 2023, 'Digital Memory and Populism: Introduction', International Journal of Communication, bind 17, 1932–8036/20230005, s. 2101–2112. <https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/21056/4101>

APA

Menke, M., & Hagedoorn, B. (2023). Digital Memory and Populism: Introduction. International Journal of Communication, 17, 2101–2112. [1932–8036/20230005]. https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/21056/4101

Vancouver

Menke M, Hagedoorn B. Digital Memory and Populism: Introduction. International Journal of Communication. 2023;17:2101–2112. 1932–8036/20230005.

Author

Menke, Manuel ; Hagedoorn, Berber. / Digital Memory and Populism : Introduction. I: International Journal of Communication. 2023 ; Bind 17. s. 2101–2112.

Bibtex

@article{465894f6d56c44b895fc804cebfd2267,
title = "Digital Memory and Populism: Introduction",
abstract = "For the Special Section “Digital Memory and Populism,” we invited contributions by academics addressing the uses of digital memory by populists, their supporters, and their opponents online. With the possibility to bypass traditional media and reach networked audiences, populist actors are increasingly active in digital publics to negotiate the role of the past with their supporters while being challenged by their opponents. In this process, personal and collective memories become a contested field in digital discourses on identity, belonging, and political ideology and are used to mobilize for or against populist agendas. The contributions in this Special Section shed light on how digital memory is shared, represented, constructed, and exploited to promote or tackle populism in different contexts and countries.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, digital memory, heartland, history, nostalgia, political communication, populism, social media discourse",
author = "Manuel Menke and Berber Hagedoorn",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "2101–2112",
journal = "International Journal of Communication",
issn = "1932-8036",
publisher = "USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Digital Memory and Populism

T2 - Introduction

AU - Menke, Manuel

AU - Hagedoorn, Berber

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - For the Special Section “Digital Memory and Populism,” we invited contributions by academics addressing the uses of digital memory by populists, their supporters, and their opponents online. With the possibility to bypass traditional media and reach networked audiences, populist actors are increasingly active in digital publics to negotiate the role of the past with their supporters while being challenged by their opponents. In this process, personal and collective memories become a contested field in digital discourses on identity, belonging, and political ideology and are used to mobilize for or against populist agendas. The contributions in this Special Section shed light on how digital memory is shared, represented, constructed, and exploited to promote or tackle populism in different contexts and countries.

AB - For the Special Section “Digital Memory and Populism,” we invited contributions by academics addressing the uses of digital memory by populists, their supporters, and their opponents online. With the possibility to bypass traditional media and reach networked audiences, populist actors are increasingly active in digital publics to negotiate the role of the past with their supporters while being challenged by their opponents. In this process, personal and collective memories become a contested field in digital discourses on identity, belonging, and political ideology and are used to mobilize for or against populist agendas. The contributions in this Special Section shed light on how digital memory is shared, represented, constructed, and exploited to promote or tackle populism in different contexts and countries.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - digital memory

KW - heartland

KW - history

KW - nostalgia

KW - political communication

KW - populism

KW - social media discourse

M3 - Editorial

VL - 17

SP - 2101

EP - 2112

JO - International Journal of Communication

JF - International Journal of Communication

SN - 1932-8036

M1 - 1932–8036/20230005

ER -

ID: 337789113