Influencer Discourse
Affective relations and identities
The rise of influencers, as power-players in the social media landscape, is a defining feature of the digital era, one that has received much attention from a variety of social science disciplines. But despite the key role that language, along with other semiotic modes, plays in the construction and communication of influencer selves, discourse analytic and pragmatic research on the topic is lagging behind. This volume attempts to fill this void, by offering contextually sensitive insights into influencers’ multi-modal communication on a range of platforms. The contributions rework established modes and tools of discourse analysis and pragmatics to shed empirical light on influencer identities and tensions (e.g. doing authenticity vis-à-vis promoting brands). We specifically attend to (a) the interplay between media affordances and communication practices and (b) the co-constructional, interactive nature of influencer selves with networked audiences, ranging from ‘affect’ to ‘hate’.
In addition to linguists, we hope that the volume will be of interest to scholars and students of social media communication, from sociological, cultural studies, anthropological and/or social psychological perspectives.
In addition to linguists, we hope that the volume will be of interest to scholars and students of social media communication, from sociological, cultural studies, anthropological and/or social psychological perspectives.
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 349] 2024. vi, 306 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 7 October 2024
Published online on 7 October 2024
© John Benjamins
Table of Contents
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Introduction: Affect, hate and relationality in the discourse of, with and about influencersAlexandra Georgakopoulou and Pilar Garcés-Conejos Blitvich | pp. 1–18
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Part I. Affect, authenticity and fandom
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Chapter 1. Reconfiguring and repurposing authenticity: Influencers and formatted stories on Instagram during the pandemicAlexandra Georgakopoulou | pp. 20–42
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Chapter 2. The divided affective connections with the influencer: Teacher Guo and fans’ digital carnival on DouyinMingyi Hou | pp. 43–74
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Chapter 3. The dimensions of relatability for Instagram lifestyle influencers: A linguistic approachRuth Page | pp. 75–98
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Part II. Aggression, cancellation and (anti)fandom
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Chapter 4. “Oh wow! We getting ready for my funeral?”: The prosody of self- and other-directed impoliteness in Jeffree Star’s YouTube product reviewsMarta Andersson and Alberto Greco | pp. 100–127
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Chapter 5. 🍊🍊🍊: Political influencers as flashpoints for manufactured online aggressionPhilip Seargeant and Korina Giaxoglou | pp. 128–147
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Chapter 6. Cancel Culture and influencers: The Hilaria Baldwin casePilar Garcés-Conejos Blitvich | pp. 148–174
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Chapter 7. Influencers’ conflictual responses to posters’ offensive comments on Instagram: Insights from GreekMaria Sifianou and Evanthia Kavroulaki | pp. 175–198
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Part III. Genres and relational practices
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Chapter 8. Performing branded affect in micro‑celebrity YouTube reaction videosJan Chovanec | pp. 200–226
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Chapter 9. Social media influencers and #DigitalDetoxDay: A multimodal discourse analysis of an Instagram anti-stigma mental health campaignDominika Beneš Kováčová | pp. 227–249
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Chapter 10. The construction of tellability in YouTube vlogging: The case of mummy vlogger influencersMikka Lene Pers | pp. 250–277
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Chapter 11. “Getting personal with you”: Affect and authenticity in confessional videos of YouTube lifestyle and beauty influencersOlivia Droz-dit-Busset and Tereza Spilioti | pp. 278–301
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Index | pp. 303–306
Subjects
Communication Studies
Main BIC Subject
CFG: Semantics, Pragmatics, Discourse Analysis
Main BISAC Subject
LAN009030: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Pragmatics