Online Verbal Aggression on Social Media During Times of Political Turmoil : Discursive Patterns from Poland’s 2020 Protests and Election
[ 1 ] Wydział Bezpieczeństwa Narodowego, Akademia Sztuki Wojennej | [ P ] employee
2025
scientific article
english
- Internet
- Policy
- Political campaign
- Social media
- Society
- Verbal aggression
- Agresywność
- Analiza dyskursu
- Atak słowny
- Badania naukowe
- Facebook (portal społecznościowy)
- Internet
- Język
- Kampania wyborcza
- Komunikacja werbalna
- Mowa nienawiści
- Ogólnopolski Strajk Kobiet (OSK)
- Politycy
- Polityka
- Protest społeczny
- Przemoc
- Społeczeństwo
- Wolność słowa
EN Online aggression and abusive language on social media pose a growing threat to democratic discourse, as they contribute to polarization, delegitimization of political actors, and the erosion of civil debate. While much of the current research relies on computational methods to detect hate speech, fewer studies investigate how online aggression functions discursively in specific socio-political contexts. This study addresses this gap by analyzing patterns of verbal aggression on Facebook and Twitter during two key events in Poland in 2020: the presidential election and the Women’s Strike. Adopting a mixed-method approach (combining sentiment analysis, content analysis, and discourse analysis) and comparing two socio-political events that generated extensive online debate, this study investigates the patterns and communicative functions of hostile and aggressive language on Facebook and Twitter. The study reveals that neutral posts dominated both datasets, but negative and aggressive posts were significantly more frequent during the Women’s Strike, where verbal aggression was used not only to reinforce group identity but also to express moral outrage, trauma, and demands for change. In contrast, aggression during the election campaign was less frequent but more calculated. It functioned as a strategic tool to delegitimize political opponents and reinforce partisan divides. Users employed vitriolic language and profanity as rhetorical tools to undermine authority, reinforce group identity, and mobilize supporters. The study also reveals asymmetric patterns of aggression, with public figures and institutions, particularly the ruling party, Church, and police, being primary targets. The findings have significant implications for understanding the dynamics of online debates and aggression patterns in social media.
09.08.2025
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Bibliografia, netografia na stronach 15-17.
CC BY (attribution alone)
open journal
final published version
09.08.2025
at the time of publication
public
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