When citizens talk: Stance and representation in online discourse on Biafra agitations

dc.creatorAjiboye, Esther, Abioye, Taiwo
dc.date2019
dc.date.accessioned2025-04-04T10:27:30Z
dc.descriptionBiafra secessionist agitations in Nigeria continue to generate varied conversations online and offline. This study applies critical discourse analysis and the appraisal framework in examining social actor representations in the ongoing Biafra agitations in Nigeria. It analyses posts produced by interlocutors, as they express variegated stances towards the agitations and its actors, within two vibrant Nigerian digital communities, Nairaland and Nigeria Village Square. This study identifies binary social actor positioning, revealing both negative valence and positive self-representation strategies towards the agitations and principal social actors in the agitations. Expressed within the appraisal resources of attitude, engagement and graduation, these valuations result in the distribution of socially and emotionally constructed identities for the principal social actors in the agitations. Such distribution is socio-cognitive, as there is the likelihood that the representations might evolve into the creation of new ideological orientations or the reinforcement of existing ideological leanings, whose consequences are potentially double-edged for tranquillity in the Nigerian polity.
dc.identifierhttp://eprints.covenantuniversity.edu.ng/12353/
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.covenantuniversity.edu.ng/handle/123456789/42396
dc.subjectP Philology. Linguistics, PE English
dc.titleWhen citizens talk: Stance and representation in online discourse on Biafra agitations
dc.typeArticle

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