Why Bystanders (Don’t) Post About Violence: Contextualizing Individual Versus Socialized Rationales of Observers’ Publication Intentions

Author:

Bayerl Petra Saskia1ORCID,Shahid Suleman2,Moitroux Pola3

Affiliation:

1. Sheffield Hallam University, UK

2. Lahore University of Management Sciences, Pakistan

3. FSG Global, Germany

Abstract

Pictures of violence form an important element in today’s news media and political online discussions. Many of these images are uploaded by bystanders, that is, people without clear links to the events. In this article, we investigate publication intentions of bystanders when confronted with disparate violent scenes. Using a two-step approach of online survey and follow-up interviews, we illustrate how bystanders rationalize the possible publication of violence online along individualized and socialized rationales. The resulting framework offers a systematic view on conditions that shape publication and non-publication intentions. Overall, our study offers important contributions by linking individual and collective perspectives on online content production as well as a re-appreciation of bystanders that includes the possibility of non-publication as moral choice.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Communication,Cultural Studies

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