Images That Matter: Online Protests and the Mobilizing Role of Pictures

Andreu Casas Salleras, Nora Webb Williams

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Do images affect online political mobilization? If so, how? These questions are of fundamental importance to scholars of social movements, contentious politics, and political behavior generally. However, little prior work has systematically addressed the role of images in mobilizing online participation in social movements. We first confirm that images have a positive mobilizing effect in the context of online protest activity. We then argue that images are mobilizing because they trigger stronger emotional reactions than text. Building on existing political psychology models we theorize that images evoking enthusiasm, anger, and fear should be particularly mobilizing, while sadness should be demobilizing. We test the argument through a study of Twitter activity related to a Black Lives Matter protest. We find that both images in general and some of the proposed emotional attributes (enthusiasm and fear) contribute to online participation. The results hold when controlling for alternative theoretical mechanisms for why images should be mobilizing, as well as for the presence of frequent image features. Our paper thus provides evidence supporting the broad argument that images increase the likelihood of a protest to spread online while also teasing out the mechanisms at play in a new media environment.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)360-375
JournalPolitical Research Quarterly
Volume72
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Funding

This research was sponsored by a Camden Hall Research Grant from the Department of Political Science at the University of Washington, Seattle. The authors wish to thank the three anonymous reviewers, John Wilkerson, Jeff Arnold, Lance Bennett, Mark Smith, Rebecca Thorpe, James Long, Benjamin Mako Hill, Pablo Barberá, our cohort of fellow graduate students, seminar participants at the Washington Institute for the Study of Inequality and Race, members of the Social Media and Political Participation Lab at New York University, and panel participants at the 67th Annual International Communication Association Conference, the 74th Annual Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association, and the 2016 American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. This research was sponsored by a Camden Hall Research Grant from the Department of Political Science at the University of Washington, Seattle. The authors wish to thank the three anonymous reviewers, John Wilkerson, Jeff Arnold, Lance Bennett, Mark Smith, Rebecca Thorpe, James Long, Benjamin Mako Hill, Pablo Barberá, our cohort of fellow graduate students, seminar participants at the Washington Institute for the Study of Inequality and Race, members of the Social Media and Political Participation Lab at New York University, and panel participants at the 67th Annual International Communication Association Conference, the 74th Annual Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association, and the 2016 American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. This research was sponsored by a Camden Hall Research Grant from the Department of Political Science at the University of Washington, Seattle.

FundersFunder number
Washington Institute for the Study of Inequality
American Political Science Association
Department of Political Science, University of Washington
Midwest Political Science Association

    Keywords

    • images
    • images as data
    • social media mobilization
    • social media
    • social movements
    • black lives matter

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