The Egyptian protest movement in the twittersphere: An investigation of dual sentiment pathways of communication

Chulhwan Chris Bang, Jaeung Lee, H. Raghav Rao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

During the course of the Egyptian civil movement in 2011, excessive suppression of the protesters caused a great deal of humanitarian concerns across the world. Egyptian protesters were supported not only in the Arabic-speaking world, but also throughout the English speaking world. The Twittersphere1 became a valuable arena for individuals to communicate amongst each other regarding important social movement issues. This paper is a study of the communication on Twitterverse consisting of both English and Arabic tweets and the sentiments expressed therein during the Egyptian protest movement. We focus on the research questions: what sentiments of Tweeters relate to signals of protest communication?, and how do protest related tweets in two languages in the Twitter sphere, that are a proxy of two different and important cultural groups, compare with each other? In order to understand the protest communications in Twittersphere, we examine a dual pathways model that relates to emotional and goal related sentiments. We apply this model to examine the online protest in Egypt. Our findings reveal the emotions and goal related sentiments that are fundamental for intention to protest across the two languages. We find that anger, fear, pride and hope were the prime sentiments regarding intention to or support of protest, regardless of language.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102328
JournalInternational Journal of Information Management
Volume58
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2021

Keywords

  • Big data
  • Egyptian social movement
  • Emotional and
  • Goal seeking pathways
  • Protest communication
  • Social media communications

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