Startseite Groupuscular identity-creation in online-communication of the Estonian extreme right
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Groupuscular identity-creation in online-communication of the Estonian extreme right

  • Mari-Liis Madisson EMAIL logo und Andreas Ventsel
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 25. April 2018

Abstract

For explaining the dispersed extreme right movements that are presently flourishing in the online sphere, British historian and political theorist Roger Griffin has elaborated the concept of groupuscular right. The groupuscular right can be characterized by the non-hierarchic and the rhizomatic structure of intra-groupuscular communication. Our study on Estonian groupuscular right complements it with the ideas of cultural semiotics that help to explicate self-descriptions of particular groupuscular nodes (e.g., blog posts) but also to analyze their relations with other extreme right groupuscules and with the radical online sphere as a whole. Although the extreme right’s communication has become more heterogeneous in its form and content, it is still possible to distinguish central and peripheral meanings. Our approach allows us to understand a seemingly paradoxical problem: why, despite of the plurality of different view-points available on the web, are groupuscular communications still dominated by strict and homogeneous ways of modeling information.

Funding statement: This work was supported by Semiotic modelling of self-description mechanisms: Theory and applications [IUT 2– 44]; Marie Curie International Research Staff Exchange Scheme Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Programme [EU-PREACC project]; Conceptualisations and experiences with public and private in technologically saturated society [PUT 44].

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Published Online: 2018-4-25
Published in Print: 2018-4-25

© 2018 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Artikel in diesem Heft

  1. Frontmatter
  2. Intrasemiotic translation in the emulations of ancient art: On the example of the collections of the University of Tartu Art Museum
  3. Groupuscular identity-creation in online-communication of the Estonian extreme right
  4. Bilingual representation of distance in visual-verbal sign systems: A case study of Guo Xi’s Early Spring
  5. Semeiotic logic or, deduction, induction, and semeiotic
  6. A conversation analytic study of error correction outside of the second language classroom
  7. Sensory representation in literature
  8. Differentiated non-differentiation: A diagrammatical approach to the trialectics of difference – from mono-dialectics to mono-trialectics
  9. Narcoculture? Narco-trafficking as a semiosphere of anticulture
  10. Interpretant, pure rhetoric, and semiotics of poetry
  11. Spatial composition as intersemiotic translation: The journey of a pattern through time from a translation semiotics theory perspective
  12. The dichotomy of society and urban space configuration in producing the semiotic structure of the modernism urban fabric
  13. Finite cognition and finite semiosis: A new perspective on semiotics for the information age
  14. Necrosemiosis: The CSI effect
  15. Semiotic resources for navigation: A video ethnographic study of blind people’s uses of the white cane and a guide dog for navigating in urban areas
  16. Borges, Pierre Menard, rhizomaticity, and the simulation of palimpsestic writing
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Heruntergeladen am 19.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/sem-2016-0077/pdf?lang=de
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