Part of
Influencer Discourse: Affective relations and identities
Edited by Pilar Garcés-Conejos Blitvich and Alexandra Georgakopoulou
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 349] 2024
► pp. 133153
References (46)
References
Abidin, Crystal. 2016. Visibility Labour: Engaging with Influencers’ Fashion Brands and #OOTD Advertorial Campaigns on Instagram. Media International Australia 161 (1): 86–100. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Amaral, Iñes, Rocio Zamora, María del Mar Grandío, José Manuel Noguera. 2016. “Flows of Communication and ‘Influentials’ in Twitter: A Comparative Approach between Portugal and Spain during 2014 European Elections.” Observatorio (OBS) Journal 10 (2): 111–128. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
AoIR. 2020. “Internet Research: Ethical Guidelines 3.0.” [URL]
Bakhtin, Mikhail. 1981. “Discourse in the Novel” (M. Holquist & C. Emerson, Trans.). In The Dialogic Imagination, ed. by M. Holquist (Ed.), 259–422. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Blommaert, Jan. 2019. “Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez: The next level of political digital culture”, Diggit Magazine, 22 January, available online at: [URL] (accessed 7 July 2020).
Blommaert, Jan and Anna De Fina. 2016. “Chronotopic Identities: On the Timespace Organization of Who We Are”. Tilburg Papers in Culture Studies, Paper 153: 1–26.Google Scholar
Dahlgren, Peter and Claudia Alvares. 2013. “Political Participation in an Age of Mediatisation”. Javnost — The Public 20 (2): 47–65. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Darrow, Thomas A. 2005. “The Influence of Celebrity Endorsements on Young Adults’ Political Opinion.” International Journal of Press/Politics, 10 (3): 80–98.Google Scholar
Daskalopoulos, Ally, Nadia Hernandez, Felix Jason, Holly Jenvey, David Gustafson, Robin Mosley, Cam Rodriguez, Nika Schoonover, and Sitoria Townsend. 2021. ‘Thinking Outside the Bubble: Addressing Polarization and Disinformation on Social Media’. CSIS Journalism Bootcamp. Available online at: [URL]. Accessed 30 March 2023.
De Fina, Anna. 2022. “‘I especially loved the little Nana dancing on the balcony’: The emergence, formation, and circulation of chronotopoes in mass-mediated communication”. Language in Society: 1–21.Google Scholar
Drake, Philip and Michael Higgins. 2006. “‘I’m a celebrity, get me into politics’: The Political Celebrity and the Celebrity Politician”. In Framing Celebrity: New Directions in Celebrity Culture, ed. by Su Holmes, and Sean Redmond, Routledge: London.Google Scholar
Esposito, Eleonora. 2021. Introduction: Critical Perspectives on Gender, Politics and Violence. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 9 (1): 1–20. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Flemmen, Magne and Savage, Mike. 2017. The Politics of Nationalism and White Racism in the UK. The British Journal of Sociology 68 (S1). S233–S264. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Freberg, Karen, Kristin Graham, Karen Mcgaughey, and Laura A. Freberg. 2011. “Who are the Social Media Influencers? A Study of Public Perceptions of Personality.” Public Relations Review 37 (1): 90–92. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Garcés-Conejos Blitvich, Pilar and Bou-Franch, Patricia (eds). 2019. Analyzing Digital Discourse: New Insights and Future Directions. London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Georgakopoulou, Alexandra. 2015. “Sharing as Rescripting: Place Manipulations on YouTube between Narrative and Social Media Affordances”. Discourse, Context & Media (Special Issue: Communicating Time and Place on Digital Media, ed. by Alexandra Georgakopoulou) 9: 64–72. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
. 2017. “Sharing the Moment as Small Stories: New Challenges.” Narrative Inquiry 17 (2): 311–333. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
. 2016. “From Narrating the Self to Posting Self(ies): A Small Stories Approach to Selfies.” Open Linguistics (Special Issue: Personal Narrative Online, edited by D. Dayter and S. Mühleisen) 2 (1): 300–317. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Georgakopoulou, Alexandra and Korina Giaxoglou. 2019. “Emplotment in the Social Mediatization of the Economy: the Poly-storying of Economist Yanis VaroufakisLanguage@Internet 16 (6): 1–15.Google Scholar
Giaxoglou, Korina. 2022. “Mobilizing Stories of Illness in Digital Contexts: A Critical Approach to Narrative, Voice and Visibility.” Poetics (Special Issue edited by Maria Mäkelä and Hanna Meretoja): Critical Approaches to the Storytelling Boom) 43 (2): 287–308. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Goodwin, A., Joseff, K., Riedl, M. J., Lukito, J. and Woolley, S. 2023. Political Relational Influencers: The Mobilization of Social Media Influencers in the Political Arena, International Journal of Communication, 17, p. 21.Google Scholar
Harrington, John. 2020. “Game of Influence: How New-wave Political Influencers became ‘Lightning Rods’ of Debate.” PR WEEK, January 20. Available online at: [URL] (accessed 07/07/2020).
Hou, Mingyi. 2019. Social Media Celebrity and the Institutionalization of YouTube. Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 25 (3): 534–553. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Hugh Clatterbuck Support Ukraine (Hughclatter), ‘Three oranges = three less whites. Deliberately provocative. Racist young woman (embedded video)’. [URL], 21 June 2020, 12:50pm, Tweet.
Khamis, Susie., Ang Lawrence & Raymond Welling. 2017. Self-branding, ‘Micro-celebrity’ and the Rise of Social Media Influencers. Celebrity Studies 8 (2): 191–208. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lewis, Rebecca. 2018. Alternative influence: Broadcasting the Reactionary Right on YouTube (White paper). New York: Data & Society Research Institute.Google Scholar
Lima, Leo Noboru. 2022. “Why The Oranges In The Godfather Mean More Than You Think,” Looper, 16 January. Available online at: [URL] (accessed 9/05/2022).
Marwick, Alice. 2015. Status Update: Celebrity, Publicity, and Branding in the Social Media Age. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Marwick, Alice and danah boyd. 2011. “To See and be Seen: Celebrity Practice on Twitter.” Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 17 (2): 139–158. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Monllos, Kristina. 2020. “‘Stand for Something’: As Protests Continue, Tone-deaf Influencer Marketing is in the Spotlight,” Digiday, 4 June. Available online: [URL], (accessed 4/07/2020).
Myers, Fraser. 2020. Ash Sarkar: woke segregationist. Spiked, 9th March 2020. Available online: [URL] (accessed: 10 May 2022).
Peacock, Alice. 2020. Journalist Ash Sarkar Gets Death Threats for Photo of her Enjoying Lolly in Park, The Mirror, 21 June. Available online at: [URL] (accessed: 21/05/2022)
Phillips, Whitney. 2016. This is Why We Can’t Have Nice Things. Mapping the Relationship between Online Trolling and Mainstream Culture. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.Google Scholar
Poe, Nathan. 2005. Big Contradictions in the Evolution Theory, page 3, christianforums.com, 11 August, [URL] (accessed 7/7/2020).
Riedl, Magdalena, Carsten Schwemmer, Sandra Ziewiecki and Lisa M. Ross. 2021. The Rise of Political Influencers — Perspectives on a Trend Towards Meaningful Content. Frontiers in Communication 6 (Article 752656): 1–7. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Sarkar, A. (@AyoCaesar), 🍊🍊🍊, [URL], 20 June 2020, 10:04 pm, Tweet.
(@AyoCaesar) ‘1 big lie. 600 retweets. John here is lucky that I’m poor, because this is straight up libel (link to tweet from a suspended account)’, 21 June 2020, 8:15 am, Tweet.
(@AyoCaesar) ‘You’re completely out of your tree. It’s a picture of me in the park, and it symbolises nothing other than being in the park enjoying an orange lolly’ (link to tweet from an account that no longer exists). [URL], 21 June 2020, 7:09am, Tweet.
(@AyoCaesar) ‘The 3 orange emojis, by the way, are because you can see 3 orange things in the photo (saddle, wheel, lolly). That’s it — you can call off the investigation, Poirot’, [URL], 21 June 2020, 7:35am, Tweet.
Seargeant, Philip. 2019. The Emoji Revolution: How Technology is Shaping the Future of Communication. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Soares, Felipe Bonow, Raquel Recuero, and Gabriela Zago. 2018. “Influencers in Polarized Networks on Twitter.” SMSociety ’18: Proceedings of the 9th International Confernece on Social Media and Society, pp. 168–177. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Street, John. 2004. “Celebrity Politicians: Popular Culture and Political Representation.” British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 6:4, pp. 435–452. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
The Guardian. 2021. Julie Burchill agrees to pay Ash Sarkar ‘substantial damages’ in libel case. The Guardian (A. Bland), 16th March 2021. Available online: [URL] (accessed: 10 May 2022)
Thompson, Rachel. 2020. “How ‘Hatewank’ Videos Became a Tool for Harassing Women in the Public Eye,” Mashable, 7 July. Available online at: [URL] (accessed 8/7/2020).
Varis, Pia. 2016. Digital Ethnography. In Georgakopoulou, Alexandra and Tereza Spilioti (eds.) The Routledge Handbook of Language and Digital Communication. London: Routledge, pp. 55–68.Google Scholar
Vochocová, Lenca. 2018. “Witty Divas, Nice Mothers and Tough Girls in a Sexist World: Experiences and Strategies of Female Influencers in Online Political Debates.” Media Culture & Society 40 (4): 535–550. DOI logoGoogle Scholar