Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/31648
Author(s): Costa, B. F.
Editor: José Valdizán Ayala
Date: 2023
Title: The rhetoric of digital hate speech against women journalists: Drawing from experiences of harassment in Portugal
Book title/volume: La ética y el derecho a la información : Nuevas audiencias activas en la era poscovid : Actas de la XVII edición del Foro de Ética y Derecho de la Información (FIÉDI)
Pages: 98 - 118
Reference: Costa, B. F. (2023). The rhetoric of digital hate speech against women journalists: Drawing from experiences of harassment in Portugal. In J. Valdizán Ayala (Eds.). La ética y el derecho a la información : Nuevas audiencias activas en la era poscovid : Actas de la XVII edición del Foro de Ética y Derecho de la Información (FIÉDI) (pp. 98-118). Universidad San Ignacio de Loyola. http://hdl.handle.net/10071/31648
ISBN: 978-612-5087-12-6
Keywords: Journalist safety
Women journalists
Assédio sexual -- Sexual harassment
Digital hate speech
Rhetorical argumentation
Abstract: Digital hate speech is a transversal phenomenon in contemporary societies. On social platforms, participatory spaces and private messages are important vehicles for its conveyance. Women journalists constitute one of the social groups most targeted by the whole phenomenon, as it is embodied and operationalized through digital harassment. This study seeks to explore 31 experiences of harassment of women journalists in Portugal, to identify and analyze the rhetorical categories that constitute the argumentation of digital hate speech. Combining rhetorical analysis with qualitative content analysis by inductive method, accusation, victim condemnation, insults, journalistic skills, intelligence and merit, and sexual objectification emerged. In the second part, the categories served the quantitative content analysis of the corpus (N = 5026) constituted by tweets, retweets and replies on Twitter profiles of 13 non-participating women journalists from the first moment of the investigation. The results show that hate speech has a public expression of 13.9% in Portugal (N = 701).
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIES-CRI - Comunicações a conferências internacionais

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