02998nam 22004931 450 991079680320332120180426160020.01-4742-9234-81-4742-9233-X1-4742-9235-610.5040/9781474292337(CKB)4100000004836915(MiAaPQ)EBC5351450(OCoLC)1031706674(UtOrBLW)bpp09261880(MiAaPQ)EBC6164839(EXLCZ)99410000000483691520180618d2018 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierSearchable talk hashtags and social media metadiscourse /Michele ZappavignaLondon ;New York :Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Plc,2018.1 online resource (xii, 245 pages) illustrations1-4742-9237-2 1-4742-9236-4 Includes bibliographical references and index.Hashtags as a semiotic technology -- The ideational and interpersonal functions of hashtags -- #whinylittlebitch: evaluative metacommentary -- #spicerfacts: the quoted voice and intersubjectivity -- #youarefakenews: construing values -- Ambient affiliation: sharing social bonds by negotiating and communing around couplings -- #alternativefacts: censuring and mocking the quoted voice -- #tinytrump: intermodal coupling and visual hashtag memes."Metadata such as the hashtag is an important dimension of social media communication. Despite its important role in practices such as curating, tagging, and searching content, there has been little research into how meanings are made with social metadata. This book considers how hashtags have expanded their reach from an information-locating resource to an interpersonal resource for coordinating social relationships and expressing solidarity, affinity, and affiliation. It adopts a social semiotic perspective to investigate the communicative functions of hashtags in relation to both language and images. This book is a follow up to Zappavigna's 2012 model of ambient affiliation, providing an extended analytical framework for exploring how affiliation occurs, bond by bond, in online discourse. It focuses in particular on the communing function of hashtags in metacommentary and ridicule, using recent Twitter discourse about US President Donald Trump as a case study. It is essential reading for researchers as well as undergraduates studying social media on any academic course."--Bloomsbury Publishing.Hashtags (Metadata)Social medialinguisticsHashtags (Metadata)Social media.302.23/1Zappavigna Michele911786UtOrBLWUtOrBLWBOOK9910796803203321Searchable talk3718825UNINA