Affiliation:
1. Howard University, USA
2. The University of Texas at Austin, USA
Abstract
Drawing from the theories of networked gatekeeping and affective publics, this study compares how news media and social media users shaped the discourse surrounding the 2021 Atlanta spa shootings. We investigate both the substantive (topics) and affective (emotions) dimensions of news articles and tweets, showcasing how institutional media and the public engage in the social construction of mass shootings involving people of underserved communities. To do so, we built two datasets: 964 news articles and 265,951 tweets. The findings from the computer-assisted content analysis reveal that Twitter users focused more on humanizing the victims and contextualizing the Atlanta spa shootings within the broader framework of anti-Asian racism, in contrast to the news outlets. Twitter users expressed significantly greater anger and fear than what is reflected in the news articles. This study also demonstrates that the news stories failed to acknowledge the intersecting identities of the victims. The findings contribute to our understanding of how journalists and individuals shape agendas and convey their affective reactions through news and social media. We suggest actions that can be taken to create a more inclusive and culturally responsive media environment.
Reference78 articles.
1. Asian American Journalists Association. (2021). AAJA guidance on Atlanta shootings & anti-Asian hate incidents. https://www.aaja.org/2021/03/17/aaja-guidance-on-atlanta-shootings/
2. Intersectionality Theory and Practice
3. Bailey S. P., Armus T. (2021, March 17). Christian leaders wrestle with Atlanta shooting suspect’s Southern Baptist ties. The Washington Post. https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/2021/03/17/atlanta-shooting-southern-baptist-pastors-wrestle/
4. academictwitteR: an R package to access the Twitter Academic Research Product Track v2 API endpoint