Angry tweets. A corpus-assisted study of anger in populist discourse
Keywords: 
Discourse
Politics
Discourse analysis
Social media
Populism
Emotion
Issue Date: 
25-Feb-2020
Publisher: 
John Benjamins
ISSN: 
2213-1272
2213-1280
Citation: 
Breeze, R. (Ruth). "Angry tweets. A corpus-assisted study of anger in populist discourse". Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict. 8 (1), 2020-02-25, 118 - 145
Abstract
The rise of populism has turned researchers’ attention to the importance of affect in politics. This is a corpus-assisted study investigating lexis in the semantic domain of anger and violence in tweets by radical-right campaigner Nigel Farage in comparison with four other prominent British politicians. Both quantitative and qualitative analyses to discourse show that Farage cultivates a particular set of affective-discursive practices, which bring anger into the public sphere and offer a channel to redirect frustrations. Rather than expressing his own emotions, he presents anger as generalised throughout society, and then performs the role of defending ‘ordinary people’ who are victims of elites. This enables him to legitimise violent emotions and actions by appealing to the need for self-assertion and self-defence.

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