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Main Authors: Jung, Anna-Katharina, Shahi, Gautam Kishore, Fromm, Jennifer, Røysland, Kari Anne, Gronert, Kim Henrik
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.12968
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author Jung, Anna-Katharina
Shahi, Gautam Kishore
Fromm, Jennifer
Røysland, Kari Anne
Gronert, Kim Henrik
author_facet Jung, Anna-Katharina
Shahi, Gautam Kishore
Fromm, Jennifer
Røysland, Kari Anne
Gronert, Kim Henrik
contents The framing of events in various media and discourse spaces is crucial in the era of misinformation and polarization. Many studies, however, are limited to specific media or networks, disregarding the importance of cross-platform diffusion. This study overcomes that limitation by conducting a multi-platform framing analysis on Twitter, YouTube, and traditional media analyzing the 2019 Koran burning in Kristiansand, Norway. It examines media and policy frames and uncovers network connections through shared URLs. The findings show that online news emphasizes the incident's legality, while social media focuses on its morality, with harsh hate speech prevalent in YouTube comments. Additionally, YouTube is identified as the most self-contained community, whereas Twitter is the most open to external inputs.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2407_12968
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Multi-Platform Framing Analysis: A Case Study of Kristiansand Quran Burning
Jung, Anna-Katharina
Shahi, Gautam Kishore
Fromm, Jennifer
Røysland, Kari Anne
Gronert, Kim Henrik
Social and Information Networks
The framing of events in various media and discourse spaces is crucial in the era of misinformation and polarization. Many studies, however, are limited to specific media or networks, disregarding the importance of cross-platform diffusion. This study overcomes that limitation by conducting a multi-platform framing analysis on Twitter, YouTube, and traditional media analyzing the 2019 Koran burning in Kristiansand, Norway. It examines media and policy frames and uncovers network connections through shared URLs. The findings show that online news emphasizes the incident's legality, while social media focuses on its morality, with harsh hate speech prevalent in YouTube comments. Additionally, YouTube is identified as the most self-contained community, whereas Twitter is the most open to external inputs.
title Multi-Platform Framing Analysis: A Case Study of Kristiansand Quran Burning
topic Social and Information Networks
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.12968