Anti-Americanism and Anti-Interventionism in Arabic Twitter Discourses
Speaker: David Romney, Graduate Student Affiliate. Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Government, Harvard University.
Speaker: David Romney, Graduate Student Affiliate. Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Government, Harvard University.
Location: CGIS South Building, 1730 Cambridge Street, Room S250
Speaker: David Romney, Graduate Student Affiliate. PhD Candidate, Department of Government, Harvard University.
Contact: Heather Conrad, hconrad@wcfia.harvard.edu
Chair: Panagiotis Roilos, Faculty Associate. George Seferis Professor of Modern Greek Studies and Professor of Comparative Literature, Harvard University.
Abstract:
Systematic investigation of attitudes expressed in Arabic on Twitter towards the United States and Iran during 2012–2013 shows how the analysis of social media can illuminate the politics of contemporary political discourses and generates an informative analysis of anti-Americanism in the Middle East. We not only analyze overall attitudes, but using a novel events-based analytical strategy, we examine reactions to specific events, including the removal of Mohamed Morsi in Egypt, the Innocence of Muslims video, and reactions to possible US intervention in Syria. We also examine the Boston Marathon bombings of April 2013, in which the United States suffered damage from human beings, and Hurricane Sandy, in which it suffered damage from nature. Our findings reinforce evidence from polling that anti-Americanism is pervasive and intense, but they also suggest that this animus is directed less toward American society than toward the impingement of the United States on other countries. Arabic Twitter discourses about Iran are at least as negative as discourses about the United States, and less ambivalent. Anti-Americanism may be a specific manifestation of a more general phenomenon: resentment toward powerful countries perceived as interfering in national and regional affairs.