Mediatized Populisms| Innuendo as Outreach: @narendramodi and the Use of Political Irony on Twitter

Authors

  • Joyojeet Pal University of Michigan
  • Priyank Chandra School of Information University of Michigan
  • Padma Chirumamilla School of Information University of Michigan
  • Vaishnav Kameswaran School of Information University of Michigan
  • Andre Gonawela School of Information University of Michigan
  • Udit Thawani School of Information University of Michigan
  • Pritika Dasgupta Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Pittsburgh

Keywords:

Twitter, India, Narendra Modi, sarcasm, irony, populism

Abstract

Our analysis of tweets from @narendramodi demonstrates how the Indian prime minister used political irony, enacted through sarcasm and wordplay, to refashion his political style and practice into a more broadly appealing populist ethic. We deconstruct confrontational Twitter messages laced with innuendo to explore the use of language as a means of political self-representation. Modi’s use of irony provides a form of political spectacle and demonstrably resonates on social media, as quantified by the high retweeting of his sarcastically worded messages. We identify three rhetorical strategies in these tweets: (1) appeals to the base through the use of popular idiom, (2) creation of a shared cognitive environment to allow followers in on inside jokes and a means of affiliating with the leader, and (3) the performance of righteousness in underlining the leader’s use of wit and restraint. We argue that the use of political irony in these tweets must be seen as part of a longer-term performative effort to recast Modi’s political image from a regional strongman into a sophisticated communicator.

Author Biographies

Joyojeet Pal, University of Michigan

Assistant Professor of InformationSchool of Information

Priyank Chandra, School of Information University of Michigan

Graduate Student, School of Information, University of Michiga

Padma Chirumamilla, School of Information University of Michigan

Graduate Student, School of Information, University of Michiga

Vaishnav Kameswaran, School of Information University of Michigan

Graduate Student, School of Information, University of Michiga

Andre Gonawela, School of Information University of Michigan

Undergraduate Student, School of Information, University of Michiga

Udit Thawani, School of Information University of Michigan

Undergraduate Student, University of Michigan

Pritika Dasgupta, Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Pittsburgh

Graduate Student, Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Pittsburgh

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Published

2017-10-23

Issue

Section

Special Sections