Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

 
 
Session Overview
Session
Comment Box & Discussions
Time:
Saturday, 18/Oct/2025:
11:00am - 12:30pm

Session Chair: Samuel Idris Cabbuag
Location: Room 10g - 2nd Floor

Novo IACS (Instituto de Arte e Comunicação Social) São Domingos, Niterói - State of Rio de Janeiro, 24210-200, Brazil

Show help for 'Increase or decrease the abstract text size'
Presentations

Disrupting Mediated Publics: Comment Sections as Sites of Epistemic and Political Rupture

Nina Duque, Alexandre Coutant, Louvinia Sainte-Rose-Fanchine, Michelle Stewart, Florence Millerand

Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada

Digital comment sections in news media are often dismissed as spaces of toxicity, disinformation, and polarization. However, beyond these reductionist perspectives, they serve as critical sites of rupture, where publics negotiate legitimacy, contest dominant narratives, and engage in alternative meaning-making processes. In French-speaking Quebec, a historical linguistic minority within predominantly Anglo-dominated digital infrastructures, these tensions are further shaped by questions of algorithmic visibility, media representation, and the evolving role of minority-language publics in platformed spaces.

This paper draws on a multi-platform ethnographic analysis of comment sections in leading Quebecois news outlets (Le Devoir, La Presse, Radio-Canada), engaging with critical platform studies (Gillespie, 2018; van Dijck, 2021) and epistemic justice frameworks (Fricker, 2007; Medina, 2013) to examine how platform affordances, moderation policies, and media governance structure public discourse. We explore three interrelated ruptures: sociotechnical ruptures, as algorithmic moderation amplifies certain voices while silencing others (Wright, 2016; Klonick, 2018); epistemic ruptures, as comment sections challenge journalistic authority and destabilize traditional hierarchies of knowledge (Pasquier, 2019; Altay et al., 2023); and political ruptures, as these spaces become arenas of both participatory critique and reactionary backlash (Boltanski & Thévenot, 2015; Rieffel, 2022).

Our findings highlight the ambivalence of digital publics: while comment sections can reinforce platformed asymmetries, they also serve as counter-hegemonic spaces where Quebecois users critically renegotiate media legitimacy. This study contributes to Internet Studies by situating these ruptures within broader debates on platformization, digital governance, and minority-language publics in an era of informational crisis.



Constructing reality: Paratexts, power dynamics, and meaning-making in "Love is Blind"

Yaara Cohen, Lillian Boxman-Shabtai

Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel

This study investigates how realism and truth are negotiated across platforms in reality television through paratextual exchanges. Focusing on "Love is Blind" Season 6, the research examines television content alongside 248 social media posts to trace how narratives flow between television and social media. The analysis maps four distinct patterns in how narratives circulate between platforms, identified through their point of origin, trajectories of circulation, and treatment at the reunion.

From these narrative flows emerged dimensions of realism negotiation: truthfulness (collective verification of factual accuracy), strategic ambiguity (production's controlled equivocation), authenticity (alignment between inner experience and presentation), and realness (acknowledged construction with convincing performance). These flows demonstrate various power dynamics that ultimately mark some "realities" and truth claims as more valuable and visible than others.

Despite the prominence of "post-truth" discourse, findings demonstrate that all key actors remain invested in establishing various forms of realism, with different stakeholders wielding influence depending on the narrative trajectory. Production and audience collaborate and amplify one another in negotiations over truthfulness, production manipulates participants and audiences through strategic ambiguity, audiences and participants challenge production through debates about authenticity, and they ponder realness independently from production.

This research offers insights into contemporary truth-making processes and a methodological tool for examining transmedia storytelling. This approach puts into practice a theme marking contemporary media studies, namely the convergence between producers, audiences, media, and texts, across platforms.



NETWORKS OF INFLUENCE: EXPLORING ONLINE HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS (HPV) VACCINE DISCUSSIONS THROUGH NETWORK ANALYSIS AND TOPIC MODELING

Maria Jeriesa Perez Osorio, Macon Reman

University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines

Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a sexually transmitted infection, and persistent infection can lead to cervical cancer (WHO, 2024). The Department of Health Philippines (DOH-Philippines) included HPV vaccination in the National Immunization Program in 2015 (DOH, 2015). It later partnered with the Department of Education (DepEd) to expand coverage through a school-based immunization program.

However, access to vaccines alone does not ensure uptake. Vaccine hesitancy, or the “delay in acceptance or refusal of safe vaccines despite availability” (WHO), is shaped by historical, political, socio-cultural contexts, public health policies, healthcare providers, and media (Dubé et al., 2013). Filipinos’ past experiences, particularly the Dengvaxia controversy, have influenced vaccine perceptions (Mabale et al., 2024; Mendoza et al., 2021). While policymakers and healthcare providers shape public discourse, social media has amplified diverse voices, often lacking mechanisms to filter misinformation.

This study examines HPV-related discourse on Facebook and TikTok, identifying key actors, public health knowledge, and strategies to improve HPV communication.

Using network analysis and topic modeling, findings reveal a need for greater integration in HPV messaging. Facebook content consists mostly of institutional announcements from health organizations, private entities, and advocacy groups, while TikTok features medical professionals and influencers sharing personal experiences. Misinformation, particularly regarding “Gardasil,” is more prevalent on Facebook. To enhance public health outreach, fostering cross-platform and cross-cluster partnerships and standardizing evidence-based content is imperative.



“Sometimes Banning Abortion Doesn't Mean Fewer Abortions or Fewer Babies Die - It Just Means More Women Die”: A Thematic Analysis of Roe v. Wade Partisan Cable News Coverage

Briana Marie Trifiro

Northeastern University, United States of America

This study examines the narratives constructed by partisan cable news outlets—CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News—in their coverage of the 2022 repeal of Roe v. Wade. Using a thematic analysis, the study identifies and analyzes recurring themes, storytelling elements, and moral evaluations that shaped these outlets’ portrayals of identity groups such as women, children, Republicans, and Democrats. The analysis explores how narratives were strategically deployed to align with each outlet’s ideological stance, offering insight into how media frames contentious social issues to reinforce partisan perspectives.

The findings reveal distinct narrative patterns across outlets. CNN and MSNBC emphasized themes of bodily autonomy and healthcare, portraying women as central victims of restrictive abortion policies. These outlets framed abortion as a critical aspect of women’s rights, often highlighting the societal harms caused by the repeal. Fox News, in contrast, emphasized moral evaluations and traditional values, portraying Republicans as protectors of unborn children and casting Democrats as moral adversaries. This outlet frequently used narratives centering on the sanctity of life, aligning with a broader conservative agenda.

Through its focus on storytelling elements such as characterization, plot development, and thematic cues, the study demonstrates how partisan media constructs narratives to engage audiences and influence public discourse. These findings contribute to the sociological understanding of how media narratives shape collective identities, reinforce ideological divides, and frame debates on contentious societal issues. This research underscores the critical role of storytelling in contemporary media ecosystems and highlights the need for further exploration of its sociopolitical implications.