Twitter misogyny associated with Hillary Clinton increased throughout the 2016 U.S. election campaign

被引:0
|
作者
Morgan Weaving
Thayer Alshaabi
Michael V. Arnold
Khandis Blake
Christopher M. Danforth
Peter S. Dodds
Nick Haslam
Cordelia Fine
机构
[1] The University of Melbourne,School of Historical and Philosophical Studies
[2] The University of Melbourne,Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences
[3] UC Berkeley,Advanced Bioimaging Center
[4] University of Vermont,Computational Story Lab, Vermont Complex Systems Center, MassMutual Center of Excellence for Complex Systems and Data Science
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Online misogyny has become a fixture in female politicians’ lives. Backlash theory suggests that it may represent a threat response prompted by female politicians’ counterstereotypical, power-seeking behaviors. We investigated this hypothesis by analyzing Twitter references to Hillary Clinton before, during, and after her presidential campaign. We collected a corpus of over 9 million tweets from 2014 to 2018 that referred to Hillary Clinton, and employed an interrupted time series analysis on the relative frequency of misogynistic language within the corpus. Prior to 2015, the level of misogyny associated with Clinton decreased over time, but this trend reversed when she announced her presidential campaign. During the campaign, misogyny steadily increased and only plateaued after the election, when the threat of her electoral success had subsided. These findings are consistent with the notion that online misogyny towards female political nominees is a form of backlash prompted by their ambition for power in the political arena.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Twitter misogyny associated with Hillary Clinton increased throughout the 2016 US election campaign
    Weaving, Morgan
    Alshaabi, Thayer
    Arnold, Michael V.
    Blake, Khandis
    Danforth, Christopher M.
    Dodds, Peter S.
    Haslam, Nick
    Fine, Cordelia
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2023, 13 (01)
  • [2] Trumping Hate on Twitter? Online Hate Speech in the 2016 U.S. Election Campaign and its Aftermath
    Siegel, Alexandra A.
    Nikitin, Evgenii
    Barbera, Pablo
    Sterling, Joanna
    Pullen, Bethany
    Bonneau, Richard
    Nagler, Jonathan
    Tucker, Joshua A.
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, 2024, 19 (04) : 499 - 499
  • [3] Leadership as a Reflection of Who We Are: Social Identity, Media Portrayal, and Evaluations of Hillary Clinton in the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election
    Vienne W. Lau
    Michelle C. Bligh
    Jeffrey C. Kohles
    Sex Roles, 2020, 82 : 422 - 437
  • [4] A "nasty woman": assessing the gendered mediation of Hillary Clinton's nonverbal immediacy cues during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign
    Cummings, Laura
    Terrion, Jenepher Lennox
    FEMINIST MEDIA STUDIES, 2021, 21 (03) : 427 - 442
  • [5] Gender in the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election: Trump, Clinton, and Media Discourse
    Weinhold, Wendy M.
    PRESIDENTIAL STUDIES QUARTERLY, 2020, 50 (04) : 974 - 975
  • [6] Characterizing the 2016 U.S. Presidential Campaign using Twitter Data
    Vegas, Ignasi
    Tian, Tina
    Xiong, Wei
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED COMPUTER SCIENCE AND APPLICATIONS, 2016, 7 (10) : 12 - 19
  • [8] What if Hillary Clinton Had Gone to Wisconsin? Presidential Campaign Visits and Vote Choice in the 2016 Election
    Devine, Christopher J.
    FORUM-A JOURNAL OF APPLIED RESEARCH IN CONTEMPORARY POLITICS, 2018, 16 (02): : 211 - 234
  • [9] Trump, Clinton, and the Gendering of Newspaper Discourse About the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election Debates
    Harmer, Emily
    Savigny, Heather
    Siow, Orly
    WOMENS STUDIES IN COMMUNICATION, 2021, 44 (01) : 81 - 101
  • [10] Trauma Metaphor Use After Hillary Clinton's Loss in the 2016 Presidential Election
    Carmack, Heather J.
    DeGroot, Jocelyn M.
    JOURNAL OF LOSS & TRAUMA, 2018, 23 (06): : 468 - 483