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Article

Heritage-based tribalism in Big Data ecologies: Deploying origin myths for antagonistic othering

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Citation

Bonacchi C & Krzyzanska M (2021) Heritage-based tribalism in Big Data ecologies: Deploying origin myths for antagonistic othering. Big Data and Society, 8 (1). https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517211003310

Abstract
This article presents a conceptual and methodological framework to study heritage-based tribalism in Big Data ecologies by combining approaches from the humanities, social and computing sciences. We use such a framework to examine how ideas of human origin and ancestry are deployed on Twitter for purposes of antagonistic ¡®othering¡¯. Our goal is to equip researchers with theory and analytical tools for investigating divisive online uses of the past in today¡¯s networked societies. In particular, we apply notions of heritage, othering and neo-tribalism, and both data-intensive and qualitative methods to the case of people¡¯s engagements with the news of Cheddar Man¡¯s DNA on Twitter. We show that heritage-based tribalism in Big Data ecologies is uniquely shaped as an assemblage by the coalescing of different forms of antagonistic othering. Those that co-occur most frequently are the ones that draw on ¡®Views on Race¡¯, ¡®Trust in Experts¡¯ and ¡®Political Leaning¡¯. The framings of the news that were most influential in triggering heritage-based tribalism were introduced by both right- and left-leaning newspaper outlets and by activist websites. We conclude that heritage-themed communications that rely on provocative narratives on social media tend to be labelled as political and not to be conducive to positive change in people¡¯s attitudes towards issues such as racism.

Keywords
heritage; tribalism; othering; origin myths; Big Data; Twitter

Journal
Big Data and Society: Volume 8, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/12/2021
Publication date online23/03/2021
Date accepted by journal01/03/2021
URL
eISSN2053-9517

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