Search results for "French presidential election"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Tweeting back: Innovative Political Contestation in Viral Posts on Twitter during the 2017 French Presidential Elections

2020

International audience; This chapter explores innovative forms of political communication among citizens on Twitter, in the context of the 2017 French Presidential Elections. It notably questions the degree to which ‘contagious’ social network communication may be impacting discourse on politics in the public sphere, related to the debate around ‘fake news’. From a corpus of over 50M election-related tweets, the chapter identifies those which were most widely retweeted during the second round of the French elections. Through qualitative analysis of 197 manually coded ‘viral’ tweets, it seeks to characterise their contents in this particular context, in order to fill a gap in the literature …

French Presidential Elections 2017[SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciencesTwitterViral communicationpolitical communication[SHS.INFO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences
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Viral Tweets, Fake News and Social Bots:

2021

International audience

[SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciencesSocial botstwitterviral communicationpolitical communicationFrench presidential elections[SHS.INFO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciencesComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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"Travailler plus pour gagner plus". Análisis cultural de un lema de la campaña presidencial francesa del 2007

2019

“Travailler plus pour gagner plus” (“Work more to earn more”) was a slogan of right-wing candidate Nicolas Sarkozy during the 2007 French presidential election, which proposed exempting overtime working hours from taxation. In this article, I develop a cultural analysis of this political slogan. Its linguistic interest lies in its poetic and theatrical dimensions. The slogan is embedded in a rich cultural context: it refers to a doxa in right-wing discourse, according to which the “social model” should be replaced with a liberal model that also rescues the “value of work”. It responded to voter economic and social concerns, which were supported by the media. Through such strong slogans, Nic…

analyse culturelle[SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciencespolitical slogancontexto culturalanalisi culturalecampagna politicacultural contextcontesto culturaleFrench presidential electionpolitical campaign[SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguisticsdiscours politiquediscorso politicopolitical discoursecontexte culturelcampagne politiquecultural analysislema políticocampaña políticaélection présidentielle françaiseelezione presidenziale francese[SHS.SCIPO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Political scienceArte. Generalidadesslogan politiquediscurso políticoelección presidencial francesaanálisis culturalslogan politicoArte
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Viral Tweets, Fake News and Social Bots in Post-Factual Politics

2018

•PurposeIn the wake of Brexit and the 2016 US Presidential Elections, “post-factual” society has been heralded as a new era of political communications, where the digital public sphere plays a central role, in spreading “viral” contents and “fake news”, with the help of automated accounts or “social bots”. This paper seeks to define these terms and the methods by which the phenomena they commonly designate might be studied, in order to characterise the dynamics of political deliberation during the 2017 French Presidential Elections on Twitter, the online platform most commonly used for political communication in France. It thus aims to better understand the mechanisms by which information b…

fake newsviralitypost-truthbotsTwitterFrench presidential elections[SHS.INFO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences
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Engineering victory and defeat: the role of social bots on Twitter during the French PresidentialElections

2018

International audience; The electoral campaigns of both Trump and Macron took place in a climate marked by accusations of “fake news”, manipulation of social media and personal attacks. Previous research has even shown that the same automated Twitter accounts were used to spread rumours to discredit both Hillary Clinton and later Emmanuel Macron, notably during the “Macron Leaks” scandal (Ferrara, 2017), which has led to accusations of orchestrated foreign infiltration in at least the French presidential campaign. Although it is difficult to distinguish (legitimate) foreign discussions of (rumours related to) French presidential candidates on Twitter on the one hand and intentional meddling…

post-truth[SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciencesViral communicationTwittersocail botsFrench presidential election[SHS.INFO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences
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