Misogynistic Hate Speech on Social Networks: a Critical Discourse Analysis
thesis
posted on 2018-02-22, 00:50authored byBeatrice Spallaccia
The present
dissertation aims at recognising online misogyny as a form of hate speech, by
providing a qualitative analysis of this discourse on Twitter and Facebook.
While recent reports in media coverage have revealed that sexist harassment is
the most pervasive social problem on Web 2.0, much scholarly research has
mainly focused on other types of hate speech (e.g., racist and xenophobic
vilification), overlooking the seriousness of misogynistic verbal abuse. The
multilayered impact of misogynous discourse on women’s lives shows the urgent
need to recognise gender-based prejudice as a form of hate speech, and to
provide a more thorough and updated theorisation of this phenomenon. For this
reason, the present dissertation suggests considering online misogyny as a
harmful speech which employs different tactics and discursive strategies to
harass and silence women who engage in online public conversation. Following
the methodology of feminist Critical Discourse Analysis, it develops an
extensive qualitative study of the abuse experienced online by six women who
reside in three different countries (i.e., Australia, Italy, and the USA). By
analysing the discursive strategies commonly employed in user-generated
contents to reaffirm hegemonic patriarchal ideologies and fixed gender
identities, this dissertation also examines the entanglement between gender
prejudice and other types of discrimination (i.e., racism, xenophobia,
homophobia, transphobia, and ageism), and it identifies the articulation of
online misogynistic hate speech through a series of tactics which harm women’s
lives on multiple levels. Therefore, it presents a taxonomy of these impacts
through a new model that was specifically developed for the research at issue,
and that will hopefully guide future research on misogynistic hate speech. In
conclusion, this study argues for the development of effective educational
tools to tackle sexist hate speech online, to guarantee women’s digital
citizenship, and to promote a more respectful conversation in cyberspace.
History
Principal supervisor
Rita Wilson
Additional supervisor 1
Raffaella Baccolini (University of Bologna)
Year of Award
2018
Department, School or Centre
School of Languages, Literatures, Cultures and Linguistics