Article, 2024

Images of protest in movement parties’ social media communication

New Media & Society, ISSN 1461-7315, 1461-4448, 10.1177/14614448241243352

Contributors

Hoffmann, Matthias 0000-0001-6480-3679 [1] Neumayer, Christina 0000-0003-0450-2983 [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Babeș-Bolyai University
  2. [NORA names: Romania; Europe, EU];
  3. [2] University of Copenhagen
  4. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

This research investigates the strategic use of protest imagery on social media by movement parties, bridging the gap between protest and institutional politics. We apply a mixed-methods analysis of 9584 Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram image posts by seven movement parties between 2015 and 2021. We find that protest images frequently serve to amplify movement grievances. Yet, parties’ involvement with contentious protest forms undergoes temporal shifts, influenced mainly by their evolving positions within the polity. Moreover, parties’ engagement with protest images differs by country and ideological leaning. Movement parties on the Right express a conflictual position between supporting and delegitimizing different protests. Conversely, Left-leaning counterparts tend to support protest, yet veer toward deradicalization and emphasizing symbolism over disruptive tactics, once they become more institutionalized. This research highlights the intricate relationship between movement parties, protest, and visual narratives on social media, in light of the interplay between movements and institutional politics.

Keywords

Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, analysis, communication, conflictual positions, counterparts, countries, deradicalization, engagement, evolving position, form, gap, grievances, ideological leanings, image posts, imagery, images, images of protest, institutional politics, intricate relationship, involvement, lean, media communication, medium, mixed-methods analysis, movement, movement parties, narratives, parties, politics, polity, position, post, protest, protest forms, protest images, relationship, research, rights, shift, social media, social media communication, strategic use, symbols, tactics, temporal shifts, use, visual narratives

Funders

  • Volkswagen Foundation

Data Provider: Digital Science