Why Buttons Matter: Repurposing Facebook’s Reactions for Analysis of the Social Visual

Authors

  • Marloes Geboers Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences University of Amsterdam
  • Nathan Stolero Tel Aviv University
  • Anna Scuttari EURAC Research
  • Livia Van Vliet University of Amsterdam
  • Arran Ridley University of Leeds

Keywords:

visual methodologies, affect theory, social media, digital methods

Abstract

Studying images on social media introduces several challenges that relate to the size of data sets and the different meaning-making grammars of social visuality; or, as aptly pointed out by others in the field, it means “studying the qualitative on a quantitative scale.” Although cultural analytics provides an automated process through which patterns can be detected in many images, this methodology doesn’t account for other modalities of the image than the image itself. However, images circulating social media can (and should) be analyzed on the level of their audience. Bridging the study of platform affordances and affect theory, this article presents a novel methodology that repurposes Facebook reactions to infer collective attitudes and performative emotional expressions vis-à-vis images shared on the large Syrian Revolution Network public page (+2M). We found visual patterns that co-occur with certain collective combinations of buttons, displaying how sociotechnical features shape the discursive frameworks of online publics.

Author Biographies

Marloes Geboers, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences University of Amsterdam

Marloes Geboers (PhD candidate) is a member of the Digital Methods Initiative at the University of Amsterdam. Marloes is also a member of the Visual Methodologies Collective, a research group affiliated to the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences. Her research blends traditional visual methodologies with digital methods approaches in order to develop novel methods that take into account both image content as well as the ways such content is audienced within networked spaces. Her work focuses on the visual communication of solidarity with Syria across social platforms. Marloes has presented several papers at ICA. She may be contacted at m.a.geboers@hva.nl.  

Nathan Stolero, Tel Aviv University

Doctoral researcher (DR)The Communication Department, The Faculty of Social Science

Anna Scuttari, EURAC Research

Doctoral researcher (DR)

Livia Van Vliet, University of Amsterdam

PhD candidate

Arran Ridley, University of Leeds

PhD candidate

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Published

2020-02-26

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Articles