The Semiotics of Authenticity: Indexicality in Donald Trump’s Tweets

How do you produce an authentic self on social media? This question is increasingly critical for the modern politician. Many voters prize authenticity as more important than policies, and social media is playing an ever-greater role in electoral politics. Further critical attention is required to un...

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Main Author: Tommy Shane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-09-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305118800315
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spelling doaj-d7c84db205e74753a3fe4d1225e26db12020-11-25T03:18:05ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512018-09-01410.1177/2056305118800315The Semiotics of Authenticity: Indexicality in Donald Trump’s TweetsTommy ShaneHow do you produce an authentic self on social media? This question is increasingly critical for the modern politician. Many voters prize authenticity as more important than policies, and social media is playing an ever-greater role in electoral politics. Further critical attention is required to understand how politicians are using social media to present an authentic self as a strategy to win votes. Whereas previous research has focused on how the content of politicians’ messages affects their authenticity, this article explores how authenticity is produced through formal aspects of self-presentational cues. To do so, the article analyzes the authenticity cues in Donald Trump’s tweets during the 2016 United States election. In what was widely dubbed as “the authenticity election,” Trump was able to present an authentic self on Twitter using little more than 140 alphanumeric characters. What cues were at play, and why did they work? By analyzing how news media narrated Trump’s authenticity, and applying a semiotic analysis based on the theory of Charles Sanders Peirce, this article uncovers the key authenticity cues in Trump’s tweets, and examines the semiotic mechanisms behind them. I show that Trump’s authenticity depended upon the deployment of indexes, signs that bear a causal link to the object they refer to. Trump’s indexes of the self—the typographic texture, the tweets’ timestamps, and the operating system tags—combined to produce an authentic form for Trump’s tweets to inhabit. I then close with observations of indexical authenticity being leveraged by other politicians.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305118800315
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tommy Shane
spellingShingle Tommy Shane
The Semiotics of Authenticity: Indexicality in Donald Trump’s Tweets
Social Media + Society
author_facet Tommy Shane
author_sort Tommy Shane
title The Semiotics of Authenticity: Indexicality in Donald Trump’s Tweets
title_short The Semiotics of Authenticity: Indexicality in Donald Trump’s Tweets
title_full The Semiotics of Authenticity: Indexicality in Donald Trump’s Tweets
title_fullStr The Semiotics of Authenticity: Indexicality in Donald Trump’s Tweets
title_full_unstemmed The Semiotics of Authenticity: Indexicality in Donald Trump’s Tweets
title_sort semiotics of authenticity: indexicality in donald trump’s tweets
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2018-09-01
description How do you produce an authentic self on social media? This question is increasingly critical for the modern politician. Many voters prize authenticity as more important than policies, and social media is playing an ever-greater role in electoral politics. Further critical attention is required to understand how politicians are using social media to present an authentic self as a strategy to win votes. Whereas previous research has focused on how the content of politicians’ messages affects their authenticity, this article explores how authenticity is produced through formal aspects of self-presentational cues. To do so, the article analyzes the authenticity cues in Donald Trump’s tweets during the 2016 United States election. In what was widely dubbed as “the authenticity election,” Trump was able to present an authentic self on Twitter using little more than 140 alphanumeric characters. What cues were at play, and why did they work? By analyzing how news media narrated Trump’s authenticity, and applying a semiotic analysis based on the theory of Charles Sanders Peirce, this article uncovers the key authenticity cues in Trump’s tweets, and examines the semiotic mechanisms behind them. I show that Trump’s authenticity depended upon the deployment of indexes, signs that bear a causal link to the object they refer to. Trump’s indexes of the self—the typographic texture, the tweets’ timestamps, and the operating system tags—combined to produce an authentic form for Trump’s tweets to inhabit. I then close with observations of indexical authenticity being leveraged by other politicians.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305118800315
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