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Fake News and Propaganda: A Critical Discourse Research Perspective
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Fake News and Propaganda: A Critical Discourse Research Perspective

Open Information Science, Vol.3(1), pp.197-208
07/23/2019
DOI: 10.1515/opis-2019-0014
url
https://doi.org/10.1515/opis-2019-0014View
Published (Version of record) Open Access

Abstract

Having been invoked as a disturbing factor in recent elections across the globe, fake news has become a frequent object of inquiry for scholars and practitioners in various fields of study and practice. My article draws intellectual resources from Library and Information Science, Communication Studies, Argumentation Theory, and Discourse Research to examine propagandistic dimensions of fake news and to suggest possible ways in which scientific research can inform practices of epistemic self-defense. Specifically, the article focuses on a cluster of fake news of potentially propagandistic import, employs a framework developed within Argumentation Theory to explore ten ways in which fake news may be used as propaganda, and suggests how Critical Discourse Research, an emerging cluster of theoretical and methodological approaches to discourses, may provide people with useful tools for identifying and debunking fake news stories. My study has potential implications for further research and for literacy practices. In particular, it encourages empirical studies of its guiding premise that people who became familiar with certain research methods are less susceptible to fake news. It also contributes to the design of effective research literacy practices.
literacy persuasion scientific research discourse studies post-truth

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