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Research Handbook on Social Media and Society

Edited by: Marko M. Skoric, Natalie Pang

ISBN13: 9781800377042
Published: January 2024
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £155.00



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As social media scholarship matures, early optimism has been replaced by a more complex and arguably gloomier picture of the role of digital media platforms in our lives. This incisive Research Handbook showcases the academic community’s responses to key societal challenges posed by evolving social media ecologies.

Multidisciplinary and international in outlook, leading contributors present wide-ranging and balanced coverage of social media research, including non-Western settings and the Global South. Chapters explore emerging interdisciplinary research methods which support the increasingly sophisticated, theoretical understanding in the field. They also debate the complex ethical issues confronting social media scholars today.

Students and early career researchers in communications, digital media and sociology will find this a highly valuable book. Due to its inclusion of diverse contexts and locales, this book will also be of interest to experienced researchers and academics.

Subjects:
Law and Society, IT, Internet and Artificial Intelligence Law
Contents:
Introduction to the Research Handbook on Social Media and Society: social media scholarship reaches maturity xvii
Marko M. Skoric and Natalie Pang

PART I. SEXUALITY, GENDER AND FAMILY
1. Social media and performative parenting 2
Sun Sun Lim and Yang Wang
2. Factors predicting parental mediation in adolescents’ social media use 12
Liang Chen and Xiaoming Liu
3. Visible, controlled, and persistent: an affordances approach to understanding social media for transnational parenting among migrant mothers 27
Barui K. Waruwu
4. Mapping technology-facilitated sexual violence in Singapore 42
Shivani Gupta, Francis Luis Medado Torres, Sharon Yvette Xiomara, Rosamor ’n Doen, Jungup Lee, Bimlesh Wadhwa and Michelle Ho

PART II. CULTURE AND POLITICS
5. Religious influencers and socially mediated cultural politics 58
Annisa R. Beta
6. The populist rhetoric of crowdfunding on digital media 70
Roei Davidson
7. Social media and crisis research 84
Patric R. Spence and Xialing Lin
8. Social media and reconciliation in post-conflict societies 98
Juma Kasadha
9. Consumers, commons, collectives: K-pop’s digital corps de ballet 112
Liew Kai Khiun and Sun Meicheng

PART III. CIVICS AND POLITICS
10. Monitoring and reputation: principal–agent relationships and the role of social media in political representation 125
Andrea Ceron
11. Political implications of disconnective practices on social media: unfriending, unfollowing, and blocking 135
Qinfeng Zhu
12. Teflonic social media behavior: why users refrain from participating in political discussions and why it matters 148
Márton Bene, Tamás Tóth and Manuel Goyanes
13. The affective resonance of norm-violation rhetoric in social media 161
W. Russell Neuman, George E. Marcus and Michael B. MacKuen
14. Socio-technical and cultural threats to social movements in the Global South: vignettes from Indonesia 181
Abdul Rohman
15. Strategic public participation in the digital age: the case of the Austrian ‘Green Book’ 194
Noella Edelmann, Valerie Albrecht and Peter Parycek

PART IV. RESEARCH METHODS AND PEDAGOGIES
16. Big data analytical methods 211
Hai Liang
17. Public opinion analytics with social media 224
Kokil Jaidka
18. Ethnographic approaches to digital folklore 239
Gabriele de Seta
19. Looking back on the scroll back: reflections on the social media scroll back method 254
Claire Moran, Elianne Renaud, Taylor Annabell, Fan Yang and Brady Robards
20. A critical review of media and communications scholarship on messaging apps 269
Emma Baulch, Amelia Johns and Ariadna Matamoros-Fernández
21. How can we take advantage of students’ social media skills in the classroom? An international exploration 286
Maria-Jose Masanet and Carlos A. Scolari

Index