The Communicative Constitution of Hate Organizations Online: A Semantic Network Analysis of “Make America Great Again”

In the context of the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election, President Donald Trump’s use of Twitter to connect with followers and supporters created unprecedented access to Trump’s online political campaign. In using the campaign slogan, “Make America Great Again” (or its acronym “MAGA”), Trump communica...

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Main Author: Sean M. Eddington
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-08-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305118790763
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author Sean M. Eddington
author_facet Sean M. Eddington
author_sort Sean M. Eddington
collection DOAJ
description In the context of the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election, President Donald Trump’s use of Twitter to connect with followers and supporters created unprecedented access to Trump’s online political campaign. In using the campaign slogan, “Make America Great Again” (or its acronym “MAGA”), Trump communicatively organized and controlled media systems by offering his followers an opportunity to connect with his campaign through the discursive hashtag. In effect, the strategic use of these networks over time communicatively constituted an effective and winning political organization; however, Trump’s political organization was not without connections to far-right and hate groups that coalesced in and around the hashtag. Semantic network analyses uncovered how the textual nature of #MAGA organized connections between hashtags, and, in doing so, exposed connections to overtly White supremacist groups within the United States and the United Kingdom throughout late November 2016. Cluster analyses further uncovered semantic connections to White supremacist and White nationalist groups throughout the hashtag networks connected to the central slogan of Trump’s presidential campaign. Theoretically, these findings contribute to the ways in which hashtag networks show how Trump’s support developed and united around particular organizing processes and White nationalist language, and provide insights into how these networks discursively create and connect White supremacists’ organizations to Trump’s campaign.
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spelling doaj.art-222b783749724921a5580b5dbe8900992022-12-21T19:43:29ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512018-08-01410.1177/2056305118790763The Communicative Constitution of Hate Organizations Online: A Semantic Network Analysis of “Make America Great Again”Sean M. EddingtonIn the context of the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election, President Donald Trump’s use of Twitter to connect with followers and supporters created unprecedented access to Trump’s online political campaign. In using the campaign slogan, “Make America Great Again” (or its acronym “MAGA”), Trump communicatively organized and controlled media systems by offering his followers an opportunity to connect with his campaign through the discursive hashtag. In effect, the strategic use of these networks over time communicatively constituted an effective and winning political organization; however, Trump’s political organization was not without connections to far-right and hate groups that coalesced in and around the hashtag. Semantic network analyses uncovered how the textual nature of #MAGA organized connections between hashtags, and, in doing so, exposed connections to overtly White supremacist groups within the United States and the United Kingdom throughout late November 2016. Cluster analyses further uncovered semantic connections to White supremacist and White nationalist groups throughout the hashtag networks connected to the central slogan of Trump’s presidential campaign. Theoretically, these findings contribute to the ways in which hashtag networks show how Trump’s support developed and united around particular organizing processes and White nationalist language, and provide insights into how these networks discursively create and connect White supremacists’ organizations to Trump’s campaign.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305118790763
spellingShingle Sean M. Eddington
The Communicative Constitution of Hate Organizations Online: A Semantic Network Analysis of “Make America Great Again”
Social Media + Society
title The Communicative Constitution of Hate Organizations Online: A Semantic Network Analysis of “Make America Great Again”
title_full The Communicative Constitution of Hate Organizations Online: A Semantic Network Analysis of “Make America Great Again”
title_fullStr The Communicative Constitution of Hate Organizations Online: A Semantic Network Analysis of “Make America Great Again”
title_full_unstemmed The Communicative Constitution of Hate Organizations Online: A Semantic Network Analysis of “Make America Great Again”
title_short The Communicative Constitution of Hate Organizations Online: A Semantic Network Analysis of “Make America Great Again”
title_sort communicative constitution of hate organizations online a semantic network analysis of make america great again
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305118790763
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