Social Media And Moral Panics: Assessing The Effects Of Technological Change On Societal Reaction

International Journal of Cultural Studies

Walsh, James P.

Abstract

Answering calls for deeper consideration of the relationship between moral panics and emergent media systems, this exploratory article assesses the effects of social media – web-based venues that enable and encourage the production and exchange of user-generated content. Contra claims of their empowering and deflationary consequences, it finds that, on balance, recent technological transformations unleash and intensify collective alarm. Whether generating fear about social change, sharpening social distance, or offering new opportunities for vilifying outsiders, distorting communications, manipulating public opinion, and mobilizing embittered individuals, digital platforms and communications constitute significant targets, facilitators, and instruments of panic production. The conceptual implications of these findings are considered.

Keywords

digital technologies, folk devils, moral panic, public communication, social media, social problems construction, societal reaction