Back to Search Start Over

#JeSuisCharlie: Towards a Multi-Method Study of Hybrid Media Events

Authors :
Sumiala, Johanna
Tikka, Minttu
Huhtamäki, Jukka
Valaskivi, Katja
Sumiala, Johanna
Tikka, Minttu
Huhtamäki, Jukka
Valaskivi, Katja
Source :
Media and Communication; 4; 4; 97-108; Successes and Failures in Studying Social Media: Issues of Methods and Ethics
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

This article suggests a new methodological model for the study of hybrid media events with global appeal. This model, developed in the project on the 2015 Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris, was created specifically for researching digital media - and in particular, Twitter. The article is structured as follows. Firstly, the methodological scope is discussed against the theoretical context, e.g. the theory of media events. In the theoretical discussion, special emphasis is given to i) disruptive, upsetting, or disintegrative media events and hybrid media events and ii) the conditions of today's heterogeneous and globalised media communication landscape. Secondly, the article introduces a multi-method approach developed for the analysis of hybrid media events. In this model, computational social science - namely, automated content analysis (ACA) and social network analytics (SNA) - are combined with a qualitative approach - specifically, digital ethnography. The article outlines three key phases for research in which the interplay between quantitative and qualitative approaches is played out. In the first phase, preliminary digital ethnography is applied to provide the outline of the event. In the second phase, quantitative social network analytics are applied to construct the digital field for research. In this phase, it is necessary to map a) what is circulating on the websites and b) where this circulation takes place. The third and final phase applies a qualitative approach and digital ethnography to provide a more nuanced, in-depth interpretation of what (substance/content) is circulating and how this material connects with the ‘where’ in the digital landscape, hence constituting links and connections in the hybrid media landscape. In conclusion, the article reflects on how this multi-method approach contributes to understanding the workings of today's hybrid media events: how they create and maintain symbolic battles over certain imagined constructs of social imagi

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Media and Communication; 4; 4; 97-108; Successes and Failures in Studying Social Media: Issues of Methods and Ethics
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1015625010
Document Type :
Electronic Resource