Online incivility in times of Covid-19: Social disunity and misperceptions of tourism industry in Poland

Lockdowns and other counter-measures introduced by governments around the globe in the aftermath of the outbreak of coronavirus dealt a serious blow to tourism and the hospitality industry. Faced with bankruptcy and closure, tourism-related businesses raised the alarm and called for government suppo...

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Main Authors: Monika Kopytowska, Radosław Krakowiak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2020-12-01
Series:Russian Journal of Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.rudn.ru/linguistics/article/viewFile/25302/18934
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spelling doaj-4690aa78d62345d6a7c409886f1463f92020-12-23T09:49:40ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)Russian Journal of Linguistics2687-00882686-80242020-12-0124474377310.22363/2687-0088-2020-24-4-743-77319625Online incivility in times of Covid-19: Social disunity and misperceptions of tourism industry in PolandMonika Kopytowska0Radosław Krakowiak1University of LodzImpuls TravelLockdowns and other counter-measures introduced by governments around the globe in the aftermath of the outbreak of coronavirus dealt a serious blow to tourism and the hospitality industry. Faced with bankruptcy and closure, tourism-related businesses raised the alarm and called for government support, which in turn triggered numerous comments from online audiences. Focusing on such online discourses and the incivility they abound with, the present article aims to address various aspects of the interface between the crisis, online communication and social polarization, as well as the constitutive and constituted nature of discourse. We bring under scrutiny the response of the online public to appeals from the tourism industry, working on the assumption that these Internet comments, in terms of content and form, have been considerably shaped by three factors, namely (1) public perception of the tourism industry, (2) culture-related emotionality patterns, as well as (3) techno-discursive design and the resulting dynamics of communication within cyberspace. Adopting the Media Proximization Approach (MPA), together with the CDA perspective on discourse and representation, and drawing on insights from studies on online communication we analyze and discuss the corpus of online comments (53,043 words) following 21 articles on the crisis within the tourism industry in Poland published between 6 March and 23 June 2020. Our findings show that the response of the online public, which is predominantly negative and at times hostile, reflects the socio-political polarization in Poland, enhanced by the sense of threat to life and health as well as the scarcity of resources. Cyberspace and its technological affordances considerably affect solidarity and disunity dynamics through representational and interpersonal proximization, enabling creation and perpetuation of stereotypes along with values and emotions. Acting as proximization triggers, nomination, predication and argumentation strategies both reflect and shape knowledge and axiological preferences, which constitute an integral part of the construction of social reality.http://journals.rudn.ru/linguistics/article/viewFile/25302/18934online discourseonline incivilitycyberspacemedia proximization approachcovid-19tourism industry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Monika Kopytowska
Radosław Krakowiak
spellingShingle Monika Kopytowska
Radosław Krakowiak
Online incivility in times of Covid-19: Social disunity and misperceptions of tourism industry in Poland
Russian Journal of Linguistics
online discourse
online incivility
cyberspace
media proximization approach
covid-19
tourism industry
author_facet Monika Kopytowska
Radosław Krakowiak
author_sort Monika Kopytowska
title Online incivility in times of Covid-19: Social disunity and misperceptions of tourism industry in Poland
title_short Online incivility in times of Covid-19: Social disunity and misperceptions of tourism industry in Poland
title_full Online incivility in times of Covid-19: Social disunity and misperceptions of tourism industry in Poland
title_fullStr Online incivility in times of Covid-19: Social disunity and misperceptions of tourism industry in Poland
title_full_unstemmed Online incivility in times of Covid-19: Social disunity and misperceptions of tourism industry in Poland
title_sort online incivility in times of covid-19: social disunity and misperceptions of tourism industry in poland
publisher Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
series Russian Journal of Linguistics
issn 2687-0088
2686-8024
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Lockdowns and other counter-measures introduced by governments around the globe in the aftermath of the outbreak of coronavirus dealt a serious blow to tourism and the hospitality industry. Faced with bankruptcy and closure, tourism-related businesses raised the alarm and called for government support, which in turn triggered numerous comments from online audiences. Focusing on such online discourses and the incivility they abound with, the present article aims to address various aspects of the interface between the crisis, online communication and social polarization, as well as the constitutive and constituted nature of discourse. We bring under scrutiny the response of the online public to appeals from the tourism industry, working on the assumption that these Internet comments, in terms of content and form, have been considerably shaped by three factors, namely (1) public perception of the tourism industry, (2) culture-related emotionality patterns, as well as (3) techno-discursive design and the resulting dynamics of communication within cyberspace. Adopting the Media Proximization Approach (MPA), together with the CDA perspective on discourse and representation, and drawing on insights from studies on online communication we analyze and discuss the corpus of online comments (53,043 words) following 21 articles on the crisis within the tourism industry in Poland published between 6 March and 23 June 2020. Our findings show that the response of the online public, which is predominantly negative and at times hostile, reflects the socio-political polarization in Poland, enhanced by the sense of threat to life and health as well as the scarcity of resources. Cyberspace and its technological affordances considerably affect solidarity and disunity dynamics through representational and interpersonal proximization, enabling creation and perpetuation of stereotypes along with values and emotions. Acting as proximization triggers, nomination, predication and argumentation strategies both reflect and shape knowledge and axiological preferences, which constitute an integral part of the construction of social reality.
topic online discourse
online incivility
cyberspace
media proximization approach
covid-19
tourism industry
url http://journals.rudn.ru/linguistics/article/viewFile/25302/18934
work_keys_str_mv AT monikakopytowska onlineincivilityintimesofcovid19socialdisunityandmisperceptionsoftourismindustryinpoland
AT radosławkrakowiak onlineincivilityintimesofcovid19socialdisunityandmisperceptionsoftourismindustryinpoland
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