Chapter 15. Ideologies and the representation of identities in anti-vaccination conspiracy theories
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Carlotta Fiammenghi
Abstract
The present chapter analyses a corpus of newspaper articles published in national UK broadsheets and tabloids dealing with the controversy surrounding the safety of the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine. By adopting a corpus-assisted critical discourse studies approach, the chapter seeks to highlight how writers variably use language to legitimise or delegitimise their own, as well as their opponents’, claims and identities. The results show that there has been an increasing tendency in recent years among writers in the traditional, mainstream press to oppose anti-vaccination conspiracy theories by identifying and criticising “typical” anti-vaccinators conspiracy theorists, thus undermining their identities rather than their claims. However, these strategies risk to backfire if they push believers in anti-vaccination conspiracy theories towards online, fringe environments like internet fora and social media.
Abstract
The present chapter analyses a corpus of newspaper articles published in national UK broadsheets and tabloids dealing with the controversy surrounding the safety of the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine. By adopting a corpus-assisted critical discourse studies approach, the chapter seeks to highlight how writers variably use language to legitimise or delegitimise their own, as well as their opponents’, claims and identities. The results show that there has been an increasing tendency in recent years among writers in the traditional, mainstream press to oppose anti-vaccination conspiracy theories by identifying and criticising “typical” anti-vaccinators conspiracy theorists, thus undermining their identities rather than their claims. However, these strategies risk to backfire if they push believers in anti-vaccination conspiracy theories towards online, fringe environments like internet fora and social media.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgements ix
- Chapter 1. Conspiracy theory discourses 1
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Part I. Conspiracy theories
- Chapter 2. A corpus-driven exploration of conspiracy theorising as a discourse type 25
- Chapter 3. Is my mobile phone listening to me? 49
- Chapter 4. “Go ahead and ‘debunk’ truth by calling it a conspiracy theory” 71
- Chapter 5. “You want me to be wrong” 99
- Chapter 6. Fake conspiracy 121
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Part II. Conspiracy theory-related communicative phenomena
- Chapter 7. Exploring the echo chamber concept 143
- Chapter 8. “If you can’t see the pattern here, there’s something wrong” 169
- Chapter 9. Complementary concepts of disinformation 193
- Chapter 10. COVID-19 conspiracy theories as affective discourse 215
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Part III. Social media and conspiracy theories
- Chapter 11. The ID2020 conspiracy theory in YouTube video comments during COVID-19 241
- Chapter 12. #conspiracymemes 267
- Chapter 13. The New World Order on Twitter 295
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Part IV. Stancetaking and (de-)legitimation within conspiracy and anti-conspiracy discourses
- Chapter 14. Expressing stance towards COVID-19 conspiracy theories in Macedonian online forum discussions 319
- Chapter 15. Ideologies and the representation of identities in anti-vaccination conspiracy theories 343
- Chapter 16. Collective identities in the online self-representation of conspiracy theorists 365
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Part V. Political and international dimensions of conspiracy theories
- Chapter 17. Anti-Sorosism 395
- Chapter 18. “These cameras won’t show the crowds” 421
- Chapter 19. From strategic depiction of conspiracies to conspiracy theories 443
- Chapter 20. “Gender ideology” and the discursive infrastructure of a transnational conspiracy theory 465
- Epilogue. Beyond discourse theory in the conspiratorial mode? 489
- Notes on contributors 495
- Index 505
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgements ix
- Chapter 1. Conspiracy theory discourses 1
-
Part I. Conspiracy theories
- Chapter 2. A corpus-driven exploration of conspiracy theorising as a discourse type 25
- Chapter 3. Is my mobile phone listening to me? 49
- Chapter 4. “Go ahead and ‘debunk’ truth by calling it a conspiracy theory” 71
- Chapter 5. “You want me to be wrong” 99
- Chapter 6. Fake conspiracy 121
-
Part II. Conspiracy theory-related communicative phenomena
- Chapter 7. Exploring the echo chamber concept 143
- Chapter 8. “If you can’t see the pattern here, there’s something wrong” 169
- Chapter 9. Complementary concepts of disinformation 193
- Chapter 10. COVID-19 conspiracy theories as affective discourse 215
-
Part III. Social media and conspiracy theories
- Chapter 11. The ID2020 conspiracy theory in YouTube video comments during COVID-19 241
- Chapter 12. #conspiracymemes 267
- Chapter 13. The New World Order on Twitter 295
-
Part IV. Stancetaking and (de-)legitimation within conspiracy and anti-conspiracy discourses
- Chapter 14. Expressing stance towards COVID-19 conspiracy theories in Macedonian online forum discussions 319
- Chapter 15. Ideologies and the representation of identities in anti-vaccination conspiracy theories 343
- Chapter 16. Collective identities in the online self-representation of conspiracy theorists 365
-
Part V. Political and international dimensions of conspiracy theories
- Chapter 17. Anti-Sorosism 395
- Chapter 18. “These cameras won’t show the crowds” 421
- Chapter 19. From strategic depiction of conspiracies to conspiracy theories 443
- Chapter 20. “Gender ideology” and the discursive infrastructure of a transnational conspiracy theory 465
- Epilogue. Beyond discourse theory in the conspiratorial mode? 489
- Notes on contributors 495
- Index 505