Protest Participation Experiences and Media Uses in Urban Protests: A Conceptualization and Empirical Examination

Authors

  • Yeji Kwon Yonsei University
  • Yong-Chan Kim Yonsei University
  • Euikyung Shin Yonsei University
  • Ahra Cho
  • Jee Hyun Kim Yonsei University

Keywords:

political participation, networked public, protest participation experiences, media use, candlelight vigil, Korea

Abstract

The current study investigates multiple dimensions of individual participants’ protest participation experiences (PPEs) and identifies different clusters involved in candlelight protests in South Korea. An online survey was conducted with 225 participants who attended at least one of the candlelight protests demanding President Park’s impeachment that were held in South Korea over a span of 27 weeks in 2016 and 2017. We found that protest participants’ experiences could be classified into five categories: independent, entertaining, reflective, solidary, and distributive. Based on these five PPEs, we identified three clusters of participant groups in the candlelight protests: carnivalesque, consumerist, and autonomous/critical. The three groups were different not only in terms of their PPEs but also their media use patterns and sociodemographic characteristics.

Author Biographies

Yeji Kwon, Yonsei University

Research Professor at the Graduate School of Communication & Arts at Yonsei University

Yong-Chan Kim, Yonsei University

Professor of communication at the Department of Communication at Yonsei University

Euikyung Shin, Yonsei University

Doctoral student at the Graduate School of Communication & Arts at Yonsei University

Ahra Cho

Doctoral student at the Graduate School of Communication & Arts at Yonsei University

Jee Hyun Kim, Yonsei University

Research Fellow at the Institute for Communication at Yonsei University

Downloads

Published

2020-02-13

Issue

Section

Articles