In:Remedies against the Pandemic: How politicians communicate crisis management
Edited by Nadine Thielemann and Daniel Weiss
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 102] 2023
► pp. 230–255
The social media campaign
for Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine
International persuasive communication at the intersection of public diplomacy, strategic narratives and propaganda
Published online: 24 July 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.102.08thi
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.102.08thi
Abstract
Focusing on the Twitter account @sputnikvaccine, the chapter analyses the social media campaign launched for the release of Sputnik V, the Russian anti-Covid vaccine, as an instance of international persuasive communication. It seeks to reveal how the campaign acts as an agent of public diplomacy and projects Russia’s soft power, while also disseminating the country’s strategic narratives (i.e., accounts of its identity, position in the international arena and general geopolitical worldview). The chapter further aims to identify the persuasive mechanisms used to achieve these goals, making particular reference to two concepts: propaganda, understood as a manipulative mechanism, and narrative (now in its customary sense) as a persuasive tool. The chapter describes how a discourse analysis based on open coding of content posted by @sputnikvaccine was used to reconstruct a rescue plot narrative in which Russia / Sputnik V saves humankind from the pandemic. This narrative structure also enables the manipulative construction of an antagonist, consisting of western organizations and corporations, which politicizes the vaccine issue and so obstructs Russia in its mission. In this way, the rescue frame enables several elements of Russian strategic narratives (e.g., Russia as a global player, a polycentric world order) to be referenced.
Keywords: Russian Studies, discourse analysis, social media, campaigning, narrative, manipulation
Article outline
- Introduction
- 1.International persuasive communication
- 2.Data and method
- 3.Results and analysis
- 3.1Tweets primarily referring to Russia’s soft power & public diplomacy
- 3.2Tweets primarily pointing to Russian strategic narratives
- 4.Discussion
- 5.Conclusions
Notes References
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