Article published In: Journal of Argumentation in Context
Vol. 13:1 (2024) ► pp.1–48
Arguing across spaces in an online epistemic community
Case studies in controversial Wikipedia articles
Published online: 17 May 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/jaic.00023.bak
https://doi.org/10.1075/jaic.00023.bak
Abstract
Wikipedia is the most consulted source of information on the web, on a global level. The collective writing of
articles, open to the participation of all, can give rise to major conflicts between contributors, in texts and debates, given the
high stakes involved in achieving agreement on a public presentation of controversial topics. We present analyses of how
disagreements are managed across socio-technical and dialogical spaces in French Wikipedia, with respect to two case studies, on
Freud and the Turin Shroud. We adopt a mixed methods approach, combining results of analyses of interviews with moderators in
these articles and argumentative discussions underlying them, within a broadly pragma-dialectical framework. We show, on one hand,
that moderators’ attempts to resolve disagreements by requiring participants to cite sources simply displace conflicts to the
nature of those sources, their validity, their authors and the good faith of their proponents. Debates concerning sources
themselves draw on social actors’ perspectives in dialogical spaces, beyond the discussion itself. Disagreements are managed
rather than resolved dialectically by displacing them to alternative socio-technical spaces, such as different sections of the
text itself, or participants’ personal pages.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Background
- 2.1The Wikipedia socio-technical infrastructure
- 2.2Participation and conflicts in Wikipedia
- 3.Theoretical-methodological approach
- 3.1From first to third person perspectives: Spaces of collective activity
- 4.Analyses
- 4.1Freud
- 4.2The Turin shroud
- 5.Concluding discussion
- 5.1Disagreement management in Wikipedia
- 5.2Relations to areas of argumentation theory
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
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