Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/219610
Title: Social media and virality in the 2014 student protests in Venezuela: Rethinking engagement and dialogue in times of imitation.
Author: Lugo-Ocando, Jairo
Hernández, Alexander
Marchesi, Mónica
Keywords: Polítics
Mitjans de comunicació de massa
Societats
Politicians
Mass media
Corporations
Issue Date: 1-Sep-2015
Publisher: University of Southern California
Abstract: This article examines the relationship between social media, political mobilization and civic engagement in the context of the students’ protests in Venezuela of 2014. The authors ask whether these technologies were used by participants as catalytic element to trigger the protests and amplify them across the country or if they were instead a galvanizing factor among more general conditions. The analysis uses “cultural chaos” and “virality/contagion” as theoretical approaches to discuss these events in order to provoke discussion around the relationship between protests and social media. However, as the authors clarify, far from a technodeterministic assumption that sees social media has somehow having agency in itself, their argumentative provocation highlights its role as a platform for political engagement through “imitation” and emotions while rejecting false dichotomies of rationality/irrationality among the “crowd.” 
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a:
It is part of: International Journal Of Communication, 2015, vol. 9, num.1, p. 3782-3802
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/219610
ISSN: 1932-8036
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Filologia Hispànica, Teoria de la Literatura i Comunicació)

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