Friend, Ally, or Rival? Twitter Diplomacy as “Technosocial” Performance of National Identity

Drawing on the constructivist tradition in international relations, we examine the influence of national identity—or how a nation views itself in relation to other nations—on the tweeting practices of its diplomatic missions. Our analysis focuses on the use of Twitter by U.S. missions in Britain, I...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Communication
Main Authors: Saif Shahin, Q. Elyse Huang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: USC Annenberg Press 2019-10-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/10921
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author Saif Shahin
Q. Elyse Huang
author_facet Saif Shahin
Q. Elyse Huang
author_sort Saif Shahin
collection DOAJ
container_title International Journal of Communication
description Drawing on the constructivist tradition in international relations, we examine the influence of national identity—or how a nation views itself in relation to other nations—on the tweeting practices of its diplomatic missions. Our analysis focuses on the use of Twitter by U.S. missions in Britain, India, and China over a four-month period brimming with diplomatic activity: June–September 2018. We find that not only do the three U.S. missions use Twitter in vastly different ways, but that their tweeting practices reflect and reproduce the specific identities the United States professes vis-à-vis these nations: a friend to Britain, an ally to India, and a rival to China. We argue that (1) Twitter is an emergent “technosocial” arena that enables nations to perform their identities online and (2) different national identities—friend, ally, and rival—derive their meanings in and through such practices. In addition, we distinguish a variety of tweeting practices and their symbolic significance in terms of national identity performance.
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spelling doaj-art-e699b2cd53d04420ac2c01a8e55383a22025-10-31T21:08:15ZengUSC Annenberg PressInternational Journal of Communication1932-80362019-10-0113Friend, Ally, or Rival? Twitter Diplomacy as “Technosocial” Performance of National IdentitySaif Shahin0Q. Elyse Huang1American UniversityThe University of Texas at Austin Drawing on the constructivist tradition in international relations, we examine the influence of national identity—or how a nation views itself in relation to other nations—on the tweeting practices of its diplomatic missions. Our analysis focuses on the use of Twitter by U.S. missions in Britain, India, and China over a four-month period brimming with diplomatic activity: June–September 2018. We find that not only do the three U.S. missions use Twitter in vastly different ways, but that their tweeting practices reflect and reproduce the specific identities the United States professes vis-à-vis these nations: a friend to Britain, an ally to India, and a rival to China. We argue that (1) Twitter is an emergent “technosocial” arena that enables nations to perform their identities online and (2) different national identities—friend, ally, and rival—derive their meanings in and through such practices. In addition, we distinguish a variety of tweeting practices and their symbolic significance in terms of national identity performance. https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/10921Twitterpublic diplomacynational identityconstructivismUnited StatesBritain
spellingShingle Saif Shahin
Q. Elyse Huang
Friend, Ally, or Rival? Twitter Diplomacy as “Technosocial” Performance of National Identity
Twitter
public diplomacy
national identity
constructivism
United States
Britain
title Friend, Ally, or Rival? Twitter Diplomacy as “Technosocial” Performance of National Identity
title_full Friend, Ally, or Rival? Twitter Diplomacy as “Technosocial” Performance of National Identity
title_fullStr Friend, Ally, or Rival? Twitter Diplomacy as “Technosocial” Performance of National Identity
title_full_unstemmed Friend, Ally, or Rival? Twitter Diplomacy as “Technosocial” Performance of National Identity
title_short Friend, Ally, or Rival? Twitter Diplomacy as “Technosocial” Performance of National Identity
title_sort friend ally or rival twitter diplomacy as technosocial performance of national identity
topic Twitter
public diplomacy
national identity
constructivism
United States
Britain
url https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/10921
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AT qelysehuang friendallyorrivaltwitterdiplomacyastechnosocialperformanceofnationalidentity