Defaulting to Metalanguage: Financial Concept Negotiations in User Comments as a Case of Mediatization

Main Article Content

Cedric Deschrijver

Abstract

On 30 June 2015, the euro crisis and its devastating effect on Greece culminated in the short term when two of Greece's bailout packages were set to expire. The deadline attracted an enormous amount of media coverage – and user engagement with it. This article analyses how the evening's main event was conceptualised in two ways – as Greece being 'in default' or 'in arrears' – and how the competing concepts were used in The Guardian Online's live blog reporting and the ensuing user comments. Tendencies regarding the concepts' usage and uptake are discussed through a close analysis of indicators of metapragmatic awareness (Verschueren, 1999). It is shown that the two terms were entextualized in distinct ways, and that this engendered specific and politically-motivated indexical links for some users in the commenting community. Drawing upon Agha's (2011) conceptualisation of mediatization, the article suggests a need to refocus investigations on the online audience's uptake of economic/financial news reporting.

Article Details

How to Cite
Deschrijver, C. (2018). Defaulting to Metalanguage: Financial Concept Negotiations in User Comments as a Case of Mediatization. Language@Internet, 16(Special Issue). Retrieved from https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/li/article/view/37749
Section
Special Issue on the Social Mediatization of the Economy: Texts, Discourses, and Participation
Author Biography

Cedric Deschrijver

Cedric Deschrijver earned his Ph.D. at King's College London, in which he investigated metalanguage surrounding economic/financial terms in online debates. Using methods of linguistic-pragmatics discourse analysis, he is currently investigating the metapragmatics of online economics discourse, as well as metapragmatic labels surrounding media discourse (e.g., 'fake news' and 'conspiracy theory').