Public discourse, political legitimay, and collective identity: Cases from Iraq, Brasil and China

HÄNSKA, Max et al. Public discourse, political legitimay, and collective identity: Cases from Iraq, Brasil and China. Communications, De Gruyter, v. 45, n. s1, p. 560-585, 2020.

HÄNSKA, Max et al.

Through the examination of recent developments in Iraq, Brazil and China, this paper explores the role of public communication in a) generating, corralling, and buttressing political legitimacy, and b) negotiating, demarcating, and reproducing collective identities. The transformation of Iraq’s public sphere after the fall of the Ba’ath regime saw it shift from a tightly controlled and unified communication space to unencumbered yet fragmented spheres split along eth-no-sectarian lines, buttressing sectarian politics and identities. The emergence of subaltern publics in Brazil’s favelas empowered residents to express public dissent, assert their voice, and develop pride in their community. Chinese efforts to control online public discourse provide the government with ways of manag-ing its perceived legitimacy and foster patriotic fellowship online. Legitimation and the affirmation of identity interact and support one another in public dis-course, as we illustrate.

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