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This book addresses the relationship between social media and social order at multiple scales and sites, from city neighborhoods to national politics, to how the data harvested by transnational corporations influence lives worldwide. It provides insights into how diverse social worlds are being reshaped by social media, analysis of what this means, and reflection on how critical publics might constructively respond.
In: LfM-Dokumentation 50
In: Questions explored
Introduction Learning More About Social Media -- How Did Social Media Start? -- How Does Social Media Affect Individuals? -- How Does Social Media Affect Society? -- How Is Social Media Changing for the Better? -- Glossary -- Source Notes -- For Further Research -- Index.
Introduction : old practices, new media /Andrew Peck --#LatinxGradCaps, cultural citizenship, and the "American dream" /Sheila Bock --Bridges, sex slaves, Tweets and guns : a multi-domain model of conspiracy theory /Timothy R. Tangherlini, Vwani Roychowdhury, and Peter M. Broadwell --The vernacular vortex : analyzing the endless churn of Donald Trump's Twitter orbit /Whitney Phillips and Ryan M. Milner --The death of Doge : institutional appropriations of the Internet memes /Andrew Peck --"Zero is our quota" : folkloric narratives of the other in online forum comments /Liisi Laineste --Trickster remakes this White House : booby traps and bawdy/body humor in post-election prankster Biden memes /Jeana Jorgensen and Linda J. Lee --Dear David : affect and belief in Twitter horror /Kristiana Willsey --The beauty, the beast, and the Fanon : the vernacularization of the literary canon and an epilogue for modernity /Tok Thompson --Classifying #BlackLivesMatter : genre and form in digital folklore /Lynne S. McNeill --The clown legend cascade of 2016 /John Laudun --The blue whale suicide challenge : hypermodern ostension on a global scale /Elizabeth Tucker --Overt and covert aspects of virtual play /Bill Ellis.
In: The psychology of everything
In: essentials
In: Springer eBook Collection
Einleitung -- Social Media im Mediensystem -- Die wichtigsten Plattformen -- Instrumente der kommunalen politischen Kommunikation in Social Media -- Nützliche Tools für die kommunalpolitische Social-Media-Kommunikation -- Best-Practice-Beispiele in der kommunalen Social-Media-Kommunikation.-Fazit -- Literatur.
The 21st century has brought both opportunities and challenges in our global, boundary-less world. Importantly, managers face a dynamic and interconnected international environment. As such, 21st-century managers need to consider the many opportunities and threats that Web 2.0, social media, and creative consumers present and the resulting respective shifts in loci of activity, power, and value. To help managers understand this new dispensation, we propose five axioms: Social media are always a function of the technology, culture, and government of a particular country or context; Local events rarely remain local; Global events are likely to be (re)interpreted locally; Creative consumers' actions and creations are also dependent on technology, culture, and government; and Technology is historically dependent. At the heart of these axioms is the managerial recommendation to continually stay up to date on technology, customers, and social media.
BASE
In: International studies perspectives: ISP, Band 20, Heft 2, S. 188–200
ISSN: 1528-3585
Social scientists and international relations scholars are increasingly analyzing data collected from Twitter or Facebook to examine political processes in which social media are used. The sheer amount of web 2.0 data and its heterogeneity (including text, photos, and videos), however, pose challenges which analysts frequently seek to overcome through a mixed method approach relying on both quantitative and qualitative methods. This article discusses the advantages and limits of using mixed methods for analyzing social media. We show how the shortcomings of quantitative methods such as sentiment analysis and data mining can be remediated by qualitative content methods in a study of the Twitter activity of private military and security companies (PMSCs).
World Affairs Online