Online misinformation and everyday ontological narratives of social distinction

Author:

Hall Natalie-Anne1,Chadwick Andrew1ORCID,Vaccari Cristian1

Affiliation:

1. Loughborough University, UK

Abstract

Most research into online misinformation has investigated its direct effects—the impact it may have on citizens’ beliefs and behavior. Much less attention has been paid to how citizens themselves make sense of misinformation as a broader social problem. We integrate theories of narrative, identity, cultural capital, and social distinction to examine how people construct the problem of misinformation and their orientation to it. We show how people engage in everyday ontological narratives of social distinction. These involve making a variety of discursive moves to position one’s “taste” in information consumption as superior to others constructed as lower in a social hierarchy. This serves to enhance social status by separating oneself from misinformation, which is presented as “other people’s problem.” We argue that these narratives have significant implications not only for citizens’ vigilance toward misinformation but also their receptiveness to interventions by policymakers, fact-checkers, news organizations, and media educators.

Funder

Leverhulme Trust

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Communication

Reference44 articles.

1. Andrey S, Rand A, Masoodi MJ, et al. (2021) Private Messaging Public Harms: Disinformation and Online Harms on Private Messaging Platforms in Canada. Ryerson Leadership Lab. Available at: https://www.cybersecurepolicy.ca/private-messages-public-harms (accessed 24 March 2023).

2. BBC News (2021) QAnon Shaman: ‘I regret entering that building’. 5 March. Available at: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/world-us-canada-56301083 (accessed 24 March 2023).

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