Co-opted Marginality and Social Media in Singapore

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2021-01-05

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2886

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Abstract

Social media provide a platform for groups that are not conventionally ostracized to claim marginality. This study proposes a working definition for the phenomenon of "co-opted marginality" within the context of communication on social media. The phenomenon is examined in the Singaporean context; 17 Singaporean citizens were interviewed about their experiences with immigration online and offline. We find that, within constrained legal, social, and traditional media environments, social media provides a platform for a dominant group facing challenges to enact co-opted marginality.

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Mediated Conversation, marginality, nationalism, prejudice, social media

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10 pages

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Proceedings of the 54th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences

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Table of Contents

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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