Article published In: Hate Speech in Online Media
Edited by Anton Granvik, Mélanie Buchart and Hartmut Lenk
[Internet Pragmatics 6:2] 2023
► pp. 197–218
A pragmatic and discourse analysis of hate words on social media
Published online: 15 September 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/ip.00096.ret
https://doi.org/10.1075/ip.00096.ret
Abstract
This paper studies some pragmatic and discursive properties of hate words employed in the comment chains of two Italian right-wing politicians’ social media accounts. The analysis focuses on hate speech directed towards two ethnic groups – African migrants and the Chinese – and an individual, the former minister of Agriculture Teresa Bellanova. Hate words are divided into two macrocategories: slurs and insulting epithets. Slurs are expressions that are consistently associated with derogatory attitudes against a group of people based on their origin/descent; insulting epithets are either offensive terms that do not attack specific identity traits or neutral words that, in certain contexts, can be offensive. Data indicate that the use of hate words is guided by pragmatic factors and discursive elements, and it changes according to the individual(s) or the groups being attacked. Hate speech on social media occurs mainly through insulting epithets, thus allowing the authors to avoid moderation and any responsibility for their utterance. The results support the idea that hate speech is a complex speech act that aims not only at derogating or expressing negative emotions but works within the framework of racist discourses as a means of creating and reinforcing political polarisation and in-group values.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.The levels of analysis
- 2.1The socio-pragmatic analysis: Insulting epithets and slurs
- 2.1.1Insulting epithets
- 2.1.2Slurs
- 2.1.3Hate words and speech acts
- 2.2The discourse analysis
- 2.1The socio-pragmatic analysis: Insulting epithets and slurs
- 3.Methodology
- 4.Hate words against ethnic groups
- 4.1Hate against the Chinese
- 4.2Hate against the migrants
- 5.Hate words against an individual
- 6.Conclusions
- Notes
References
References (54)
Anderson, Luvell, and Michael Barnes. 2022. “Hate speech.” In The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2022 Edition), ed. by Edward N. Zalta. [URL] (accessed 30 December 2022).
Assimakopoulos, Stavros, Fabienne H. Baider, and Sharon Millar (eds.). 2017. Online Hate Speech in the European Union. Cham: Springer.
Bergen, Benjamin K. 2016. What the F: What Swearing Reveals about Our Language, Our Brains and Ourselves. New York: Basic Books.
Bianchi, Claudia. 2018. “Perspectives and slurs.” In Beyond Semantics and Pragmatics, ed. by Gerhard Preyer, 187–198. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
. 2021. Hate speech, il lato oscuro del linguaggio. [Hate Speech, the Dark Side of Language]. Bari-Roma: Laterza.
Brown, Alexander. 2017a. “What is hate speech? Part 1: The myth of hate.” Law and Philosophy 36(4): 419–468.
. 2018. “What is so special about online (as compared to offline) hate speech?” Ethnicities 18(3): 297–326.
Cepollaro, Bianca. 2015. “Gli epiteti denigratori: presupposizioni infami [Slurs: Infamous presuppositions].” Esercizi Filosofici 10(2): 154–168.
Cohen, Henri, and Claire Lefebvre (eds.). 2005. Handbook of Categorization in Cognitive Science. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
Croom, Adam. 2014. “The semantics of slurs: a refutation of pure expressivism.” Language sciences 41, Part B: 227–242.
De Mauro, Tullio. 2016. “Le parole per ferire [Words to wound].” Internazionale, 27 September 2016. [URL] (accessed 20 August 2022).
Dipoppa, Gemma, Guy Grossman and Stephanie Zonszein. 2023. “Locked down, lashing out: COVID-19 effects on Asian hate-crimes in Italy.” Journal of Politics 85(2): 389–404.
Faloppa, Federico. 2011. Razzisti a parole (per tacer dei fatti) [Racists by Words (not to Talk about the Facts)]. Bari-Roma: Laterza.
. 2020. #ODIO. Manuale di resistenza alla violenza delle parole [#HATE. Handbook of Resistance to the Violence of Words]. Torino: UTET.
Fish, Stanley. 1994. There’s No Such Thing as Free Speech and It’s a Good Thing, Too. New York: Oxford University Press.
Frenda, Simona, Alessandra Teresa Cignarella, Valerio Basile, Cristina Bosco, Viviani Patti, and Paolo Rosso. 2022. “The unbearable hurtfulness of sarcasm.” Expert Systems with Applications 1931, 116398.
Fumagalli, Corrado. 2019. “Discorsi d’odio come pratiche ordinarie [Hate speech as ordinary practices].” Biblioteca Della Libertà 54(224): 3–18.
Hart, Christopher. 2010. Critical Discourse Analysis and Cognitive Science: New Perspectives on Immigration Discourse. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan.
Langton, Rae, Sally Haslanger, and Luvell Anderson. 2012. “Language and race.” In Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Language, ed. by Gillian Russell, and Delia Graff Fara, 753–767. New York: Routledge.
Lee, Christopher J., and Albert N. Katz. 1998. “The differential role of ridicule in sarcasm and irony.” Metaphor and Symbol 13(1): 1–15.
López Rodríguez, Irene. 2009. “Of women, bitches, chickens and vixens: animal metaphors for women in English and Spanish.” Cultura, lenguaje y representación / Culture, Language and Representation 71: 77–100.
Matsuda, Mari, Charles R. Lawrence, Richard Delgado, and Kimberle W. Crenshaw (eds.). 1993. Words that Wound: Critical Race Theory, Assaultive Speech and the First Amendment. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Musolff, Andreas. 2012. “Immigrants and parasites: the history of a bio-social metaphor.” In Migrations: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, ed. by Michi Messer, Renée Schroeder, and Ruth Wodak, 249–258. Wien: Springer.
. 2017. “Dehumanizing metaphors in UK immigrant debates in press and online media.” In Contemporary Discourses of Hate and Radicalism across Space and Genres, ed. by Monika Kopytowska, 41–56. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Määttä, Simo. 2020. “Syrjivän kielenkäytön rajoilla [On the borders of discriminating language].” Niin&Näin 3: 71–77.
Määttä, Simo, Karita Suomalainen, and Ulla Tuomarla. 2021. “Everyday discourse as a space of citizenship: The linguistic construction of in-groups and out-groups in online discussion boards.” Citizenship Studies 25(6): 773–790.
Ortner, Sherry B. 1974. “Is female to male as nature is to culture?” In Woman, Culture and Society, ed. by Michelle Z. Rosaldo, and Louise Lamphere, 68–87. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Pietrandrea, Paola, and Elena Battaglia. 2022. “‘Migrants and the EU’: The diachronic construction of ad hoc categories in French far-right discourse.” Journal of Pragmatics 1921: 139–157.
Potts, Christopher. 2003. “Expressive content as conventional implicature.” In Proceedings of the North East Linguistics Society 33, ed. by Makoto Kadowaki, and Shigeto Kawahara, 303–322. UMass Amherst: GLSA.
Richardson, John. 2004. (Mis)Representing Islam: The Racism and Rhetoric of British Broadsheet Newspapers. Amsterdam: John Banjamins.
Russo, Ernesto, and Pablo Bernardino Tempesta. 2017. “Categorisation and defence strategies.” In Online Hate Speech in the European Union, ed. by Stavros Assimakopoulos, Fabienne H. Baider, and Sharon Millar, 25–29. Cham: Springer.
Tipler, Caroline R., and Janet B. Rusher. 2019. “Dehumanizing representations of women: The shaping of hostile sexist attitudes through animalistic metaphors.” Journal of Gender Studies 28(1): 109–118.
Tirrell, Lynne. 2012. “Genocidal language games.” In Speech and Harm: Controversies over Free Speech, ed. by Maitra Ishani, and Mary Kate McGowan, 174–221. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Whiting, Daniel. 2013. “It’s not what you said, it’s the way you said it: slurs and conventional implicatures.” Analytic Philosophy 54(3): 364–377.
Wodak, Ruth. 2001. “The discourse historical approach.” In Methods of Critical Discourse Analysis, ed. by Ruth Wodak, and Michael Meyer, 63–94. London: SAGE.
Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
Segado-Boj, Francisco, Juan Martín-Quevedo, Juan-Manuel González-Aguilar & Tamara Antona-Jimeno
Kulik, Maciej, Katarzyna Budzynska, He Zhang, Marie-Amélie Paquin & Barbara Konat
2025. Offensive language in reactions to public figures in polarised discourse online. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict
Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk, Barbara, Olga Dontcheva-Navratilova & Renata Povolná
Römer-Pieretti, Max, Elías Said-Hung & Julio Montero-Díaz
Tumino, Matilde, Matilde Baldi, Luigi Castelli & Luciana Carraro
Määttä, Simo K.
2023. Linguistic and discursive properties of hate speech and speech facilitating the expression of
hatred. Internet Pragmatics 6:2 ► pp. 156 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 12 march 2026. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
