MITIGATION IN ONLINE CONTROVERSIES IN COMMENTS ON DIGITAL NEWS AND ON TWITTER
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7203/Normas.v11i1.20699Keywords:
mitigation, online interactions, controversy, pragmaticsAbstract
This article presents an analysis of mitigation in a corpus of comments to digital press articles and contributions on Twitter about the Moors and Christians festival, a tradition that led to controversies in the Spanish public debate. Based on Albelda and Briz (2020), we define mitigation as a rhetorical and pragmatic strategy that proceeds from the need to protect the participants’ face and that allows the speaker to achieve more efficiently his conversational goals. For this reason, this paper not only looks into the linguistic strategies used to mitigate, but also into the specific interactional contexts in which they appear and the functions they carry out regarding face. To that end, this investigation is based on previous research on mitigation and on the methodology developed by Albelda and al. (2014), adapted to the situational features of the online interactions studied in this research. The results show that mitigation appears mainly with preventive function in interactional contexts of disagreement or attack to an identified interlocutor, but also frequently as self-protection in responding moves to the entire discussion.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
-
Abstract556
-
PDF (Español)307
Issue
Section
License
This article is under this license: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 .
Authors agree with the following statements:
- The authors retain the copyright and guarantee the journal the right to be the first publication of the work as well as a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgment of the authorship of the work and the initial publication in this journal.
- Authors may separately establish additional agreements for the non-exclusive distribution of the version of the work published in the journal (for example, place it in an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are allowed and encouraged to disseminate their work electronically (for example, in institutional repositories or on their own website) before and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive scientific exchanges.