Engaging With the Oscar-Winning Parasite on Social Media: Intercultural Use of Country-of-Origin Frames

Authors

  • Dam Hee Kim Korea University
  • Kyung Jung Han California State University, Bakersfield
  • Sungchul Lee Sun Moon University

Keywords:

frames, country of origin, word of mouth, Twitter, Oscars

Abstract

This study examines how 1,576,302 tweets (now called X posts) in Korean and English discussed the Oscar-winning Korean film, Parasite, through the theoretical lens of framing and Country-of-Origin (COO). Method-wise, the current study used big social media data analysis methods, following four steps—manual coding, keyword extraction, computerized coding, and analysis—which allowed identification of big patterns of COO frames as well as more nuanced analyses. The results show that Korean and English tweets preferred to use different types and frames of COO. English tweets tended to discuss Parasite’s COO in terms of language while using more cognitive (e.g., film quality) and normative frames (e.g., social norms). Korean tweets were likely to discuss Parasite’s COO in terms of country and to use affective frames (e.g., history-making). Overall, the number of Twitter engagement increased with the inclusion of Parasite’s COO information and affective frames, but was suppressed by cognitive frames. The use of normative frames decreased Twitter engagement among English, not Korean, tweets.

Author Biographies

Dam Hee Kim, Korea University

Dam Hee Kim (Ph.D., University of Michigan) is an Associate Professor in the School of Media and Communication at Korea University in South Korea.  With an emphasis on social media, she investigates individuals’ engagement with news, politics and entertainment content in the evolving media environment.

Kyung Jung Han, California State University, Bakersfield

Kyung Jung Han, (PhD, University of Missouri) is an Associate Professor of Public Relations in the Department of Communications. She has published her studies in Communication Research, Health Informatics Journal, International Journal of Strategic Communication, International Journal of Online Marketing, etc. Her research areas include public relationships in social media and effective message creating in health intervention programs.

Sungchul Lee, Sun Moon University

Dr. Sungchul Lee is an Assistant Professor of the Division of Computer Science and Engineering at Sun Moon University, South Korea. He received his Ph.D. degree in Computer Science at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas in 2018. He has researched several NSF projects (NSF IIA-1301726, IIS #1839194) which are related to data science, software, and education. His research interests include mobile health, big data, data science, and web service.

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Published

2024-04-14

Issue

Section

Articles