Hoaxford’s Candidate: Political Memes as an Empowering Response to “Dying Democracy”
Gerard Martin C. Suarez
Discipline: media studies
Abstract:
This paper engages with the idea that democracy is dying because
of social media – an idea prevalent in mainstream Philippine political
discourse. The idea is problematic because it paints a hopeless and
deterministic picture of media’s effects and use within Philippine society
and obscures possible interventions that citizens can undertake through
social media platforms, the use of memes as critical discourse being one
example.
To support the argument, a critical discourse analysis was undertaken
on a manually constructed opportunistic corpus focusing on the case of
then presidential candidate Bongbong Marcos Jr.’s false claim that he is a
University of Oxford graduate, and the memes and discourse it produced.
The sample includes over one-hundred and twenty thousand comments
drawing from news reports posted on Facebook by the Philippines’ top
two mainstream outlets (i.e., ABS-CBN and GMA) and some critical
citizens who grabbed mainstream media attention (i.e., Tarantadong
Kalbo, the Oxford Philippines Society, and the nuns from Religious of
the Good Shepherd). This analysis is anchored and guided by critical
culture, meme, and participatory democratic theory.
While memefication can be used both to reinforce political
misinformation and further prevent actual civic engagement from
happening, affirming mainstream discourse to an extent, meme discourse
can be also be used to make citizens aware of false narratives and expand
the scope of citizen democratic participation. The paper concludes by
arguing for a more nuanced approach towards disinformation, highlighting
the need to incorporate a broader sociocultural understanding in viewing both the problem and possible interventions. It argues for the inclusion
of citizens and citizen practices alongside institutional approaches as
they can serve as key allies to fighting back against disinformation.
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ISSN 2094-8328 (Print)