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ID190943
Title ProperBottom-up imaginaries
Other Title Informationexamining discursive construction of social media roles and affordances in India
LanguageENG
AuthorBhatia, Kiran Vinod
Summary / Abstract (Note)In this article, I analyze discourses around the introduction of Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Code – new changes in laws regulating new media companies in India, and how these discourses inform the imaginations about the rights and duties of corporations and citizens in the country. I argue that though these guidelines were brought into effect through legal and juridical channels, they were reified through state-led and user-generated political discourse, constituting bottom-up imaginaries about the governance of social media platforms. To comprehensively analyze the impact of the guidelines regulating social media companies, this article argues for the need to examine the interlinkages between online discourse and policy regulations at three levels of operation: (a) the government’s imagination for the country’s digital future, (b) quotidian online discourse reifying the politics of regulation and (c) the dominant imagination of social media as socio-political actors responsible for upholding democracy, the freedom of speech of users, and dissent. Based on the findings and analysis, I argue that the regulation of social media platforms in India demonstrates reconfiguring relationships between social media companies, emerging forms of nationalism, and the government’s expectations of compliance from social media companies.
`In' analytical NoteContemporary South Asia Vol. 31, No.2; Jun 2023: p. 251-267
Journal SourceContemporary South Asia Vol: 31 No 2
Key WordsNationalism ;  Government ;  Corporations ;  Social Media ;  Twitter ;  Bottom-up Imaginaries ;  Data Extractivism ;  Koo


 
 
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