de Keulenaar, Emillie and Tuters, Marc and Osborne-Carey, Cassian and Jurg, Daniel and Kisjes, Ivan (2021) A free market in extreme speech: Scientific racism and bloodsports on YouTube. Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, 37 (4). pp. 949-971. ISSN 2055-768X
Type of Research: | Article |
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Creators: | de Keulenaar, Emillie and Tuters, Marc and Osborne-Carey, Cassian and Jurg, Daniel and Kisjes, Ivan |
Description: | Around 2018, YouTube became heavily criticized for its radicalizing function by allowing far-right actors to produce hateful videos that were in turn amplified through algorithmic recommendations. Against this ‘algorithmic radicalization’ hypothesis, Munger and Phillips (2019, A supply and demand framework for YouTube politics. Preprint. https://osf.io/73jys/download; Munger and Phillips, 2020, Right-wing YouTube: a supply and demand perspective. The International Journal of Press/Politics, 21(2). doi: 10.1177/1940161220964767.)) argued that far-right radical content on YouTube fed into audience demand, suggesting researchers adopt a ‘supply and demand’ framework. Navigating this debate, our article deploys novel methods for examining radicalization in the language of far-right pundits and their audiences within YouTube’s so-called ‘Alternative Influence Network’ (Lewis, 2018, Alternative Influence. Data & Society Research Institute. https://datasociety.net/library/alternative-influence/ (accessed 9 December 2020).). To that end, we operationalize the concept ‘extreme speech’—developed to account for ‘the inherent ambiguity of speech contexts’ online (Pohjonen and Udupa, 2017, Extreme speech online: an anthropological critique of hate speech debates. International Journal of Communication, 11: 1173–91)—to an analysis of a right-wing ‘Bloodsports’ debate subculture that thrived on the platform at the time. Highlighting the topic of ‘race realism’, we develop a novel mixed-methods approach: repurposing the far-right website Metapedia as a corpus to detect unique terms related to the issue. We use this corpus to analyze the transcripts and comments from an archive of 950 right-wing channels, collected from 2008 until 2018. In line with Munger and Phillips’ framework, our empirical study identifies a market for extreme speech on the platform, which came into public view in 2017. |
Official Website: | https://academic.oup.com/dsh/article-abstract/37/4/949/6445201?redirectedFrom=fulltext |
Publisher/Broadcaster/Company: | Oxford University Press |
Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > London College of Communication |
Date: | 28 November 2021 |
Funders: | AHRC |
Digital Object Identifier: | 10.1093/llc/fqab076 |
Date Deposited: | 09 Apr 2024 11:59 |
Last Modified: | 09 Apr 2024 11:59 |
Item ID: | 18075 |
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/18075 |
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