Article published In: Advances in the Study of Social Action in Online Interaction
Edited by Valeria Sinkeviciute
[Internet Pragmatics 7:1] 2024
► pp. 137–160
“Facebook’s about to know, Karen”
Mobilising social media to sanction public conduct
Published online: 22 December 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/ip.00104.wal
https://doi.org/10.1075/ip.00104.wal
Abstract
This paper explores the social action of sanctioning an interlocutor’s conduct in public spaces through social
media. Using membership categorisation analysis (Hester, Stephen, and Peter Eglin. 1997. Culture
in Action: Studies in Membership Categorization
Analysis. Washington: University Press of America.), we examine
how, in offline face-to-face disputes filmed by one party, interactants deploy the name ‘Karen’ to sanction someone and threaten
the transposition of the recording onto social media to impose accountability to the public at large. Our findings show how
sanctioning through categorising an individual as a ‘Karen’ is interactionally achieved through framing conduct as entitled or
otherwise problematic, distinguishing in-situ production of ‘Karen’ from a delivery that is perceptually
unavailable to an interlocutor. We explore how social media functions as a resource to shape the ongoing encounter by orienting to
the camera, and thus the online audience, as an external authority.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Accountability, sanctioning and degrading in social interaction
- 3.‘Karen’ as a membership category
- 4.Data and method
- 5.Analysis
- 5.1In-situ categorisation available and conflictual to the interlocutor
- 5.2Categorisation in absentia
- 6.Discussion and conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- Note
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