Social Media and Conflict: A Visual Analysis of War and Peace Frames in Pakistan
Second Author's Department
Journalism & Mass Communication Department
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https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440241291627
Document Type
Research Article
Publication Title
SAGE Open
Publication Date
10-1-2024
doi
10.1177/21582440241291627
Abstract
Based on traditional peace communication scholarship, this study, embedded in journalism studies and visual politics literature, analyzes photographs of conflict using war and peace frames and explores the role social media can play in digital peacebuilding practices. A content analysis of 674 visuals of the second deadliest terrorist attack in Pakistan posted on Twitter revealed the dominance of war photographs. The majority of the visual tweets were related to the afflicted victims and the visiting elites. Our analysis revealed that the visual narrative predominantly adopted a war approach. Results also showed significant variations in the war and peace narrative over time. Overall, this study challenges the views of peace journalism scholars that social media would lead to a more peace-oriented approach. We argue that peace narratives may be difficult to occur on digital platforms in securitized national conflicts where elites and a dominant public opinion oppose alternative perspectives.
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APA Citation
Hussain, S.
&
Fahmy, S.
(2024). Social Media and Conflict: A Visual Analysis of War and Peace Frames in Pakistan. SAGE Open, 14(4),
10.1177/21582440241291627
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/faculty_journal_articles/6162
MLA Citation
Hussain, Shabir, et al.
"Social Media and Conflict: A Visual Analysis of War and Peace Frames in Pakistan." SAGE Open, vol. 14,no. 4, 2024,
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/faculty_journal_articles/6162
Comments
Article. Record derived from SCOPUS.