À qui parlent les professionnels politiques ? 

On September 7, 2010, the European Parliament voted in a resolution encouraging its members to use Web 2.0 technologies and “enter into a dialogue with the citizenry.” This article looks at the perceptions professional politicians develop regarding the audiences they believe they are reaching throug...

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Main Authors: Sandrine Roginsky, Sophie Huys
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Université Laval 2016-01-01
Series:Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/communication/6051
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author Sandrine Roginsky
Sophie Huys
author_facet Sandrine Roginsky
Sophie Huys
author_sort Sandrine Roginsky
collection DOAJ
description On September 7, 2010, the European Parliament voted in a resolution encouraging its members to use Web 2.0 technologies and “enter into a dialogue with the citizenry.” This article looks at the perceptions professional politicians develop regarding the audiences they believe they are reaching through digital multimedia platforms. The objective is twofold : to analyze these perceptions or representations and then to understand how such representations are constructed. The authors' objective is to contribute, in the field of politics, to a better understanding of the users and their uses of two specific digital platforms, Facebook and Twitter, through a longitudinal study over a period of five years (2009-2014).
format Article
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institution Kabale University
issn 1189-3788
1920-7344
language fra
publishDate 2016-01-01
publisher Université Laval
record_format Article
series Communication
spelling doaj-art-f9351d1a7e3941378db992a62a271d9a2025-01-09T11:27:03ZfraUniversité LavalCommunication1189-37881920-73442016-01-0133210.4000/communication.6051À qui parlent les professionnels politiques ? Sandrine RoginskySophie HuysOn September 7, 2010, the European Parliament voted in a resolution encouraging its members to use Web 2.0 technologies and “enter into a dialogue with the citizenry.” This article looks at the perceptions professional politicians develop regarding the audiences they believe they are reaching through digital multimedia platforms. The objective is twofold : to analyze these perceptions or representations and then to understand how such representations are constructed. The authors' objective is to contribute, in the field of politics, to a better understanding of the users and their uses of two specific digital platforms, Facebook and Twitter, through a longitudinal study over a period of five years (2009-2014).https://journals.openedition.org/communication/6051discoursesocial mediaimagined audienceEuropean Parliamentprofessional politicians
spellingShingle Sandrine Roginsky
Sophie Huys
À qui parlent les professionnels politiques ? 
Communication
discourse
social media
imagined audience
European Parliament
professional politicians
title À qui parlent les professionnels politiques ? 
title_full À qui parlent les professionnels politiques ? 
title_fullStr À qui parlent les professionnels politiques ? 
title_full_unstemmed À qui parlent les professionnels politiques ? 
title_short À qui parlent les professionnels politiques ? 
title_sort a qui parlent les professionnels politiques
topic discourse
social media
imagined audience
European Parliament
professional politicians
url https://journals.openedition.org/communication/6051
work_keys_str_mv AT sandrineroginsky aquiparlentlesprofessionnelspolitiques
AT sophiehuys aquiparlentlesprofessionnelspolitiques