{"title":"Ready for the Homeland","authors":"Katarina Damčević, Filip Rodik","doi":"10.21018/RJCPR.2018.3.264","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The article analyzes nationalistically motivated online hate speech on selected right-wing public Facebook pages in Croatia. The rise of historical revisionism and populism paved the way for the growing presence of hate speech, with the most salient example being the resurfacing of the World War II fascist salute Za dom spremni (“Ready for the Homeland”) across different communicative situations. We account for the online dynamic of Za dom spremni as well as for the most frequent expressions of xenophobia that accompany the salute by presenting data gathered between 2012 – 2017 using Facebook Graph API. From the total of 4.5 million postings published by readers, those containing Za dom spremni and its variations were filtered and followed by the frequency and prevalence of the accompanying notions. By relying on cultural semiotics, we highlight the socio-communicative functions of hate speech on two levels. Firstly, the notion of the semiosphere helps us illustrate how hate speech is used to reproduce the idea of Croatianness as the dominant self-description. Secondly, we examine how the dominant self-description maintains the boundary between us and the other by merging diverse textual fragments and how their perseverance depends on the communicative situations they enter online.","PeriodicalId":40874,"journal":{"name":"Romanian Journal of Communication and Public Relations","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.3000,"publicationDate":"2018-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Romanian Journal of Communication and Public Relations","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.21018/RJCPR.2018.3.264","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"COMMUNICATION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 5
Abstract
The article analyzes nationalistically motivated online hate speech on selected right-wing public Facebook pages in Croatia. The rise of historical revisionism and populism paved the way for the growing presence of hate speech, with the most salient example being the resurfacing of the World War II fascist salute Za dom spremni (“Ready for the Homeland”) across different communicative situations. We account for the online dynamic of Za dom spremni as well as for the most frequent expressions of xenophobia that accompany the salute by presenting data gathered between 2012 – 2017 using Facebook Graph API. From the total of 4.5 million postings published by readers, those containing Za dom spremni and its variations were filtered and followed by the frequency and prevalence of the accompanying notions. By relying on cultural semiotics, we highlight the socio-communicative functions of hate speech on two levels. Firstly, the notion of the semiosphere helps us illustrate how hate speech is used to reproduce the idea of Croatianness as the dominant self-description. Secondly, we examine how the dominant self-description maintains the boundary between us and the other by merging diverse textual fragments and how their perseverance depends on the communicative situations they enter online.
这篇文章分析了克罗地亚某些右翼公共Facebook页面上的民族主义仇恨言论。历史修正主义和民粹主义的兴起为仇恨言论的出现铺平了道路,最突出的例子是二战法西斯行礼Za dom spremni(“为祖国做好准备”)在不同的交际场合重新出现。我们通过使用Facebook Graph API提供2012年至2017年间收集的数据,解释了Za dom spremni的在线动态以及伴随敬礼的最常见的仇外情绪表达。从读者发布的总共450万篇帖子中,过滤掉那些包含Za dom spremni及其变体的帖子,然后是相关概念的频率和流行程度。通过文化符号学,我们在两个层面上强调了仇恨言论的社会交际功能。首先,符号圈的概念有助于我们说明仇恨言论如何被用来再现克罗地亚人的概念,作为主要的自我描述。其次,我们考察了占主导地位的自我描述如何通过融合不同的文本片段来维持我们与他者之间的边界,以及它们的持久性如何取决于它们进入网络的交际情境。
期刊介绍:
The Romanian Journal of Communication and Public Relations welcomes high quality contributions investigating topics in the fields of mass media, communication and public relations, from theoretical, empirical and critical perspectives. The RJCPR mainly favors original and articulate research papers, but theory-focused articles, book reviews and other scientific contributions are also welcome