Picturing the Party: Instagram and Party Campaigning in the 2014 Swedish Elections

This article explores Swedish parties’ activities on Instagram during the 2014 elections. Understanding party campaign communication as highly strategic, that is, communication to persuade and mobilize voters in order to win the elections, we ask whether Instagram was used to (1) broadcast campaign...

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Main Authors: Kirill Filimonov, Uta Russmann, Jakob Svensson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-08-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305116662179
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spelling doaj-4bae6b9655584a97a39ebf7637d7c0a02020-11-25T03:18:05ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512016-08-01210.1177/205630511666217910.1177_2056305116662179Picturing the Party: Instagram and Party Campaigning in the 2014 Swedish ElectionsKirill Filimonov0Uta Russmann1Jakob Svensson2Uppsala University, SwedenFHWien University of Applied Sciences of WKW, AustriaUppsala University, SwedenThis article explores Swedish parties’ activities on Instagram during the 2014 elections. Understanding party campaign communication as highly strategic, that is, communication to persuade and mobilize voters in order to win the elections, we ask whether Instagram was used to (1) broadcast campaign messages, (2) mobilize supporters, (3) manage the party’s image, and (4) amplify and complement other campaign material (i.e., hybrid campaign use). With this study, we follow previous studies on the use of digital communication platforms in the hands of campaigning political actors, but we direct our attention to a new platform. We conducted a content analysis of 220 party postings on Instagram, collected during the hot phase of the campaign. The result shows that the platform was mainly used for broadcasting rather than for mobilization. The image the parties were presenting leaned toward personalization with a strong presence of top candidates in their postings. Top candidates were primarily displayed in a political/professional context. Finally, half of the analyzed postings showed signs of hybridized campaign practices. The presented findings give a first glimpse on how political parties use and perform on Instagram.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305116662179
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kirill Filimonov
Uta Russmann
Jakob Svensson
spellingShingle Kirill Filimonov
Uta Russmann
Jakob Svensson
Picturing the Party: Instagram and Party Campaigning in the 2014 Swedish Elections
Social Media + Society
author_facet Kirill Filimonov
Uta Russmann
Jakob Svensson
author_sort Kirill Filimonov
title Picturing the Party: Instagram and Party Campaigning in the 2014 Swedish Elections
title_short Picturing the Party: Instagram and Party Campaigning in the 2014 Swedish Elections
title_full Picturing the Party: Instagram and Party Campaigning in the 2014 Swedish Elections
title_fullStr Picturing the Party: Instagram and Party Campaigning in the 2014 Swedish Elections
title_full_unstemmed Picturing the Party: Instagram and Party Campaigning in the 2014 Swedish Elections
title_sort picturing the party: instagram and party campaigning in the 2014 swedish elections
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2016-08-01
description This article explores Swedish parties’ activities on Instagram during the 2014 elections. Understanding party campaign communication as highly strategic, that is, communication to persuade and mobilize voters in order to win the elections, we ask whether Instagram was used to (1) broadcast campaign messages, (2) mobilize supporters, (3) manage the party’s image, and (4) amplify and complement other campaign material (i.e., hybrid campaign use). With this study, we follow previous studies on the use of digital communication platforms in the hands of campaigning political actors, but we direct our attention to a new platform. We conducted a content analysis of 220 party postings on Instagram, collected during the hot phase of the campaign. The result shows that the platform was mainly used for broadcasting rather than for mobilization. The image the parties were presenting leaned toward personalization with a strong presence of top candidates in their postings. Top candidates were primarily displayed in a political/professional context. Finally, half of the analyzed postings showed signs of hybridized campaign practices. The presented findings give a first glimpse on how political parties use and perform on Instagram.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305116662179
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