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Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1263434

Talking About Culture on Twitter: A comparative analysis of culture-related topics in nine European countries in 2019 and 2020


(University of Haifa, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Autonomous University of Barcelona, University of Copenhagen, University of Belgrade and CECS, University of Versailles-Saint-Quentin, Tampere University, University of Zurich, University of Zadar and Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar) Geffen Ben David, Susanne Janssen, Jinju Kim, Jordi López-Sintas, Franziska Marquart, Ratko Nikolić, Lucas Page Pereira, Ossi Sirkka, Sebastian Weingartner, Neta Yodovich, Željka Zdravković
Talking About Culture on Twitter: A comparative analysis of culture-related topics in nine European countries in 2019 and 2020, 2021. (izvještaj).


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Naslov
Talking About Culture on Twitter: A comparative analysis of culture-related topics in nine European countries in 2019 and 2020

Autori
Geffen Ben David, Susanne Janssen, Jinju Kim, Jordi López-Sintas, Franziska Marquart, Ratko Nikolić, Lucas Page Pereira, Ossi Sirkka, Sebastian Weingartner, Neta Yodovich, Željka Zdravković

Kolaboracija
University of Haifa, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Autonomous University of Barcelona, University of Copenhagen, University of Belgrade and CECS, University of Versailles-Saint-Quentin, Tampere University, University of Zurich, University of Zadar and Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar

Vrsta, podvrsta
Ostale vrste radova, izvještaj

Godina
2021

Ključne riječi
digitalisation, data scraping, understandings of culture, Twitter, Covid-19, Europe

Sažetak
To understand how Europeans view culture and its societal values, we followed a bottom-up approach to researching and mapping cultural diversity in Europe. In doing so, we employed data scraping techniques to collect digital content and gain a better understanding of how Europeans express themselves online about culture. Two main research questions guided our investigation: (1) In mapping the cultural ‘Twittersphere’ in all INVENT partner countries, we asked which topics are associated with the keyword ‘culture’ in conversations on Twitter during the years 2019 (pre-Covid19) and 2020 (during Covid19). (2) We were interested in the types of actors that engage in conversations about culture on Twitter and the extent to which these interact with each other.The data scraping process began with the social media platform Twitter in January 2021 using R programming language. We decided to focus on Twitter for several reasons. First, Twitter is prominently used for sharing news stories, but also enables the emergence of stories from below, based on individuals’ experiences, opinions, and struggles, making it a highly relevant source for studying understandings of culture from the bottom-up. Second, Twitter offers one of the most accessible websites for research in the social sciences. In 2021, the platform introduced an advanced Academic Research product track that facilitates access to the platform’s historical archive for qualified researchers. To scrape relevant tweets, we used the keyword “culture” in the INVENT project’s respective country languages ; in some cases, the sample was further extended with English-language “culture” tweets as well. We focused on tweets posted from users’ home locations in each country and analyzed the tweets through topic modelling, a powerful and effective method for detecting relevant hidden structures in the data.We identified eight thematic topic groups across the nine INVENT countries: Tweets and conversations about “Film/TV/Theatre”, “Literature/Arts”, “Music/Concerts/Festivals”, “Policies and Politics”, “Identities and Boundaries”, “Society and Inequalities”, “Economics/Business/Work”, and “Spaces and Places”. As these topics are identified in almost all countries, they are at the heart of discussions related to culture in Europe. Additionally, we detected several country-specific topics that are unique to the particular context in each country, such as conversations on “MeToo” or “Health”. Such context-specific cultural topics could be of interest to cultural policymakers, but they also highlight the need to acknowledge cultural discussions on the regional and national level. Our analysis shows that there is a widely shared basis of culture that refers not only to the arts, leisure, and creativity (“culture as arts”), but also to more elementry aspects of human life such as politics, inequality, and economics (“culture as way of life”). Another similarity between many countries, albeit to varying degrees, is the relationship between culture and the emerging Covid19 pandemic, where Twitter users discussed the shutting down of cultural venues and the policies implemented to save at-risk events and venues. The most active users in our data are media and cultural organizations and individuals such as journalists and artists, that account for a significant share of tweets in each country. This means that the perceptions and viewpoints of specific organizations and professions are to some extent overrepresented in our data. Still, we found a large variety of users in each country who contribute to cultural discussions on Twitter, indicating that analyzing Twitter data is indeed useful in studying culture in a bottom-up fashion. Despite choosing a general keyword, our approach restricted the data collection to tweets that explicitly mention the word “culture”, and posts about other cultural offerings were, therefore, not included in our data.

Izvorni jezik
Engleski

Znanstvena područja
Sociologija

Napomena
Rad je izvještaj o istraživanju za Europsku komisiju, ostvaren kao isporuka 5.1 i objavljen u srpnju 2021. na web stranicama Horizon 2020 projekta 870691 - INVENT ("European Inventory of Societal Values of Culture as a Basis for Inclusive Cultural Policies in a Globalizing World"). Projekt je isporuka radnog paketa 5, čiji je koordinator Sveučilište u Kopenhagenu. Istraživačica iz hrvatskog tima i suatorica izvještaja je Željka Zdravković (Sveučilište u Zadru i Institut društvenih znanosti Ivo Pilar).



POVEZANOST RADA


Ustanove:
Institut društvenih znanosti Ivo Pilar, Zagreb,
Sveučilište u Zadru

Profili:

Avatar Url željka zdravković (autor)

Poveznice na cjeloviti tekst rada:

Pristup cjelovitom tekstu rada

Citiraj ovu publikaciju:

(University of Haifa, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Autonomous University of Barcelona, University of Copenhagen, University of Belgrade and CECS, University of Versailles-Saint-Quentin, Tampere University, University of Zurich, University of Zadar and Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar) Geffen Ben David, Susanne Janssen, Jinju Kim, Jordi López-Sintas, Franziska Marquart, Ratko Nikolić, Lucas Page Pereira, Ossi Sirkka, Sebastian Weingartner, Neta Yodovich, Željka Zdravković
Talking About Culture on Twitter: A comparative analysis of culture-related topics in nine European countries in 2019 and 2020, 2021. (izvještaj).
(University of Haifa, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Autonomous University of Barcelona, University of Copenhagen, University of Belgrade and CECS, University of Versailles-Saint-Quentin, Tampere University, University of Zurich, University of Zadar and Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar) (University of Haifa, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Autonomous University of Barcelona, University of Copenhagen, University of Belgrade and CECS, University of Versailles-Saint-Quentin, Tampere University, University of Zurich, University of Zadar and Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar) Geffen Ben David, Susanne Janssen, Jinju Kim, Jordi López-Sintas, Franziska Marquart, Ratko Nikolić, Lucas Page Pereira, Ossi Sirkka, Sebastian Weingartner, Neta Yodovich, Željka Zdravković (2021) Talking About Culture on Twitter: A comparative analysis of culture-related topics in nine European countries in 2019 and 2020.. Izvještaj.
@unknown{unknown, year = {2021}, keywords = {digitalisation, data scraping, understandings of culture, Twitter, Covid-19, Europe}, title = {Talking About Culture on Twitter: A comparative analysis of culture-related topics in nine European countries in 2019 and 2020}, keyword = {digitalisation, data scraping, understandings of culture, Twitter, Covid-19, Europe} }
@unknown{unknown, year = {2021}, keywords = {digitalisation, data scraping, understandings of culture, Twitter, Covid-19, Europe}, title = {Talking About Culture on Twitter: A comparative analysis of culture-related topics in nine European countries in 2019 and 2020}, keyword = {digitalisation, data scraping, understandings of culture, Twitter, Covid-19, Europe} }




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