Based and confused: Tracing the political connotations of a memetic phrase across the web

Current research on the weaponisation of far-right discourse online has mostly focused on the dangers of normalising hate speech. However, this often operates on questionable assumptions about how far-right terms retain problematic meanings over time and across different platforms. Yet contextual me...

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Main Authors: Sal Hagen, Daniël de Zeeuw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2023-01-01
Series:Big Data & Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517231163175
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author Sal Hagen
Daniël de Zeeuw
author_facet Sal Hagen
Daniël de Zeeuw
author_sort Sal Hagen
collection DOAJ
description Current research on the weaponisation of far-right discourse online has mostly focused on the dangers of normalising hate speech. However, this often operates on questionable assumptions about how far-right terms retain problematic meanings over time and across different platforms. Yet contextual meaning-change, we argue, is key to assessing the normalisation of problematic but fuzzy terms as they spread across the Web. To redress this, our article traces the changing meaning of the term based , a word that was appropriated from Black Twitter to become a staple of online far-right slang in the mid-2010s. Through a quali-quantitative cross-platform approach, we analyse the evolution of the term between 2010 and 2021 on Twitter, Reddit and 4chan. We find that while the far right meaning of based partially survived, its meaning changed and was rendered diffuse as it was adopted by other communities, afforded by a repurposable kernel of meaning to based as ‘not caring about what other people think’ and ‘being true to yourself’ to which different (political) connotations were attached. This challenges the understanding of far-right memes and hate speech as carrying a single and persistent problematic message, and instead emphasises their varied meanings and subcultural functions within specific online communities.
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spelling doaj.art-8d7d4fbbfe124ca198d5a7a109ece3bd2023-03-14T12:33:35ZengSAGE PublishingBig Data & Society2053-95172023-01-011010.1177/20539517231163175Based and confused: Tracing the political connotations of a memetic phrase across the webSal HagenDaniël de ZeeuwCurrent research on the weaponisation of far-right discourse online has mostly focused on the dangers of normalising hate speech. However, this often operates on questionable assumptions about how far-right terms retain problematic meanings over time and across different platforms. Yet contextual meaning-change, we argue, is key to assessing the normalisation of problematic but fuzzy terms as they spread across the Web. To redress this, our article traces the changing meaning of the term based , a word that was appropriated from Black Twitter to become a staple of online far-right slang in the mid-2010s. Through a quali-quantitative cross-platform approach, we analyse the evolution of the term between 2010 and 2021 on Twitter, Reddit and 4chan. We find that while the far right meaning of based partially survived, its meaning changed and was rendered diffuse as it was adopted by other communities, afforded by a repurposable kernel of meaning to based as ‘not caring about what other people think’ and ‘being true to yourself’ to which different (political) connotations were attached. This challenges the understanding of far-right memes and hate speech as carrying a single and persistent problematic message, and instead emphasises their varied meanings and subcultural functions within specific online communities.https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517231163175
spellingShingle Sal Hagen
Daniël de Zeeuw
Based and confused: Tracing the political connotations of a memetic phrase across the web
Big Data & Society
title Based and confused: Tracing the political connotations of a memetic phrase across the web
title_full Based and confused: Tracing the political connotations of a memetic phrase across the web
title_fullStr Based and confused: Tracing the political connotations of a memetic phrase across the web
title_full_unstemmed Based and confused: Tracing the political connotations of a memetic phrase across the web
title_short Based and confused: Tracing the political connotations of a memetic phrase across the web
title_sort based and confused tracing the political connotations of a memetic phrase across the web
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517231163175
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