Social media influencers’ transgressions – A multimodal critical discourse analysis of canceling strategies in threaded discussion on body shaming

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Camelia Cmeciu
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5533-8274

Resumo

Transgressions triggered by social media influencers’ inappropriate statements lead to social media hypes. The online public arena in Romania was dominated by a ‘stretch mark’ scandal when a famous influencer (George Buhnici) body shamed women. His controversial remarks urged a wave of outrage in the digitalized environment. Applying a sociocultural approach to character assassination and a Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis, we aimed at identifying how the social media influencer (SMI) was represented in the online users’ comments and how the commenters discursively represented themselves. The main findings showed that name calling, ridicule, social identity denial, and disgracing were the four main character attack strategies present in the cancelation supporters’ representation of the influencer as the ‘other’. In their attempt to protect the body shamer (the influencer) from losing his social capital, cancelation resisters employed minimizing, bolstering, transcendence (freedom of speech), and attacking the accuser (the canceler) as main strategies to represent the influencer as ‘one of us’. Online users adopted three main roles in their discursive self-representation: delegitimators of collective Us, experiencers, and social advisers. In the end, the study provides a threefold relationship framework for the cancelation process triggered by social media influencers’ transgressions.

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Cmeciu, C. (2025). Social media influencers’ transgressions – A multimodal critical discourse analysis of canceling strategies in threaded discussion on body shaming. methaodos.Revista De Ciências Sociais, 13(1), m251301a02. https://doi.org/10.17502/mrcs.v13i1.860
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Biografia Autor

Camelia Cmeciu, University of Bucharest

Professor at the Faculty of Journalism and Communication Studies, University of Bucharest. Currently she is the vice-chair at the Central and East European network, ECREA. She has extensively published on crisis and risk communication related to environmental and health. Her research was published in Web of Science journals (Public Relations Review, Comunicar, Global Health Promotion, Discourse & Society) or at international publishing houses (Routledge, Springer, Peter Lang, or Bloomsbury Publishing). She was a research fellow at the Research Institute of University of Bucharest with a research grant on pandemic communication and multimodality. She is the editor-in-chief of the journal Styles of Communication, indexed in ERIH Plus, EBSCO, DOAJ and Index Copernicus.

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