Face Threats in Threads: Assessing the Responses to Impoliteness in Facebook Comments on 1MDB

Impoliteness has become common among online users and appears to be consented by netizens. This study seeks to investigate the reaction to impoliteness from the perspective of face-threat witnesses (FTWs) in Facebook comments. Twelve news posts on Facebook regarding the 1MDB scandal in 2015 were sel...

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Main Authors: Ismail, Isma Noornisa, Shanmuganathan, Thilagavathi
Format: Article
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2019
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/24081/
https://doi.org/10.17576/3L-2019-2504-03
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spelling my.um.eprints.240812020-03-22T09:43:36Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/24081/ Face Threats in Threads: Assessing the Responses to Impoliteness in Facebook Comments on 1MDB Ismail, Isma Noornisa Shanmuganathan, Thilagavathi P Philology. Linguistics Communication. Mass media Impoliteness has become common among online users and appears to be consented by netizens. This study seeks to investigate the reaction to impoliteness from the perspective of face-threat witnesses (FTWs) in Facebook comments. Twelve news posts on Facebook regarding the 1MDB scandal in 2015 were selected, and impolite comment threads that were reactions to the news were extracted. Fifty-two threads were found to contain impolite comments targeted at non-participants of this interaction, thus corresponding to the characteristics of face-threat witnesses. Dobs and Blitvich's (2013) model for participant response options, Culpeper's (2011, 2016) Conventionalised Impoliteness Formulae (CIF) and Bousfield's (2007) list of defensive counter-strategies were used to analyse the responses. Impolite responses by the FTWs were found to be atypical. Denying the opposition either via being offensive or defensive subjugated the preference in the findings, though offensive appeared more prominently. Apart from deny opposition, corroborate opposition, and react, the current study also discovered new categories for the response options which did not fit in any of the categories, hence labelled as Distinct Features. The FTWs not only sanctioned impoliteness, but initial impoliteness in their responses, despite being 'other-directed'. © 2019 Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia. All rights reserved. Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2019 Article PeerReviewed Ismail, Isma Noornisa and Shanmuganathan, Thilagavathi (2019) Face Threats in Threads: Assessing the Responses to Impoliteness in Facebook Comments on 1MDB. 3L: The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies, 25 (4). pp. 34-50. ISSN 0128-5157 https://doi.org/10.17576/3L-2019-2504-03 doi:10.17576/3L-2019-2504-03
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic P Philology. Linguistics
Communication. Mass media
spellingShingle P Philology. Linguistics
Communication. Mass media
Ismail, Isma Noornisa
Shanmuganathan, Thilagavathi
Face Threats in Threads: Assessing the Responses to Impoliteness in Facebook Comments on 1MDB
description Impoliteness has become common among online users and appears to be consented by netizens. This study seeks to investigate the reaction to impoliteness from the perspective of face-threat witnesses (FTWs) in Facebook comments. Twelve news posts on Facebook regarding the 1MDB scandal in 2015 were selected, and impolite comment threads that were reactions to the news were extracted. Fifty-two threads were found to contain impolite comments targeted at non-participants of this interaction, thus corresponding to the characteristics of face-threat witnesses. Dobs and Blitvich's (2013) model for participant response options, Culpeper's (2011, 2016) Conventionalised Impoliteness Formulae (CIF) and Bousfield's (2007) list of defensive counter-strategies were used to analyse the responses. Impolite responses by the FTWs were found to be atypical. Denying the opposition either via being offensive or defensive subjugated the preference in the findings, though offensive appeared more prominently. Apart from deny opposition, corroborate opposition, and react, the current study also discovered new categories for the response options which did not fit in any of the categories, hence labelled as Distinct Features. The FTWs not only sanctioned impoliteness, but initial impoliteness in their responses, despite being 'other-directed'. © 2019 Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia. All rights reserved.
format Article
author Ismail, Isma Noornisa
Shanmuganathan, Thilagavathi
author_facet Ismail, Isma Noornisa
Shanmuganathan, Thilagavathi
author_sort Ismail, Isma Noornisa
title Face Threats in Threads: Assessing the Responses to Impoliteness in Facebook Comments on 1MDB
title_short Face Threats in Threads: Assessing the Responses to Impoliteness in Facebook Comments on 1MDB
title_full Face Threats in Threads: Assessing the Responses to Impoliteness in Facebook Comments on 1MDB
title_fullStr Face Threats in Threads: Assessing the Responses to Impoliteness in Facebook Comments on 1MDB
title_full_unstemmed Face Threats in Threads: Assessing the Responses to Impoliteness in Facebook Comments on 1MDB
title_sort face threats in threads: assessing the responses to impoliteness in facebook comments on 1mdb
publisher Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
publishDate 2019
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/24081/
https://doi.org/10.17576/3L-2019-2504-03
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