New Piece: Corrupted Infrastructures of Meaning: Post-truth Identities Online
/Catherine R. Baker and I have just completed a new article: “Corrupted Infrastructures of Meaning: Post-truth Identities Online.”
The piece is a contribution to Howard Tumber and Silvio Waisbord’s exciting new edited volume, The Routledge Companion to Media Disinformation and Populism, which is forthcoming with Routledge.
We develop a conceptual framework for examining how post-truth identities are developed and maintained online. Part of our task involves defining what post-truth identities are, and how they are the result of a confluence of cognitive biases at the individual level and a range of media system factors. We illustrate these conceptual themes with discussion of three cases: ‘anti-vaxxers,’ ‘flat earthers,’ and ‘incels.’
A summary is below. The edited book will be out next year.
This article outlines a framework for analyzing post-truth identities. Our overarching argument is that post-truth identities emerge from a confluence of individual-level and contextual factors. Cognitive biases that shape how individuals encounter and process information have recently been granted freer rein as a result of changes in the technological basis of media systems in the advanced democracies. But in addition to these macro-structural changes, we suggest that attention should also focus on how post-truth identities come to be formed and maintained at the micro level, in everyday life. Drawing upon the social identity theory tradition in social psychology, we assume that identity is inextricably tied to group formation and the maintenance of group belonging. Post-truth identities rely upon corrupted, self-initiated infrastructures of meaning that are animated by emotional narratives and repositories of cherry-picked, misrepresented justifying ‘evidence.’ These infrastructures are, in part, enabled by the unique affordances of social media for decentralizing, but also algorithmically organizing, the production and circulation of socially consequential information. Identity affirmation is reinforced by the major online platforms’ commercially driven, personalized recommendation features, such as Google search’s autosuggest, YouTube’s autoplay, and Facebook’s news feed. The affordances these create contribute to shared experiences among believers but can also make it more likely that larger audiences are exposed to falsehoods as part of everyday searching, reading, viewing, and sharing. And yet, much of the infrastructure exists on the broader internet, away from social media platforms, in dedicated folksonomic settings such as forums, wikis, email lists, podcasts, and alternative news sites. These settings also provide ready-made materials that mainstream media organizations use in their reporting, which further contributes to the spread of false and distorted beliefs and the formation of identity among both existing supporters and new recruits. We illustrate these conceptual themes with three examples: ‘anti-vaxxers,’ ‘flat earthers,’ and ‘incels.’
Baker, C. R. & Chadwick, A. (forthcoming). Corrupted Infrastructures of Meaning: Post-truth Identities Online. In Tumber, H. & Waisbord, S. (Eds.). The Routledge Companion to Media Disinformation and Populism. New York: Routledge. Link.