“Notre avenir, c’est nous qui le choisissons! #PolQC”: Twitter, political discourse, and the modern Québécois nationalist identity

Presentation Type

Poster

Keywords

Quebec, Twitter, Political Discourse, Critical Discourse Analysis

Department

International Studies and Languages

Major

International Studies

Abstract

Québec’s struggle for independence has come to define its identity and political agendas. To the Québécois, the quote “Je me souviens,” reflecting the Québécois nationalist discourse (cf. Heller & Labrie, 2004) entails a past in which an anglophone minority marginalized the francophone majority, limiting their political, social, cultural, and even linguistic rights (Oakes & Warren, 2009). Québécois political parties, including the Bloc Québécois (BQ), the Parti Québécois (PQ), and the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ), continue to invoke elements of this discourse through their media communications to frame their perspectives on the modern Québécois identity (Oakes & Warren, 2009), political ideologies (van Dijk, 2002), and platforms (Parmelee & Bichard, 2012), including Twitter, a micro-blogging tool for mass communication (Zappavigna, 2013).

We formed a corpus of these parties’ Twitter feeds from just before the January 2017 mosque attacks in Québec City until one month after the attacks. We performed a political discourse analysis (van Dijk, 1997) on the tweets, using the program MaxQDA. Our analysis will focus on the following questions:

  1. How do the PQ, the BQ, and the CAQ express their political identities and purposes through tweets?
  1. Which political ideologies are represented in these parties’ tweets; what are points of convergence and divergence among them?

Initial findings suggest that all three parties invoke symbolic elements of the Québécois identity in their tweets, identifying the Québécois as victims of the Canadian federal government’s aggression. The majority of the BQ’s and PQ’s tweets advocate for Québec’s political independence on both the federal and the international stage, while the CAQ focuses on Québec’s domestic issues. Each party also portrays itself as the protector of the interests of other minoritized populations. Thus, while the parties’ tweets maintain historicity with traditional nationalist discourse, they also indicate a new discourse valorizing diversity and globalization.

Summary

This poster presents a political discourse analysis of 3 Québécois political parties’ tweets, focusing on the parties’ expression of political and cultural identity. While each party maintains historicity, identifying the Québécois as victims of the Canadian federal government; the tweets also indicate a new discourse valorizing diversity and globalization.

Faculty Mentor

Kelle Keating Marshall

Funding Source or Research Program

Summer Undergraduate Research Program

Location

Waves Cafeteria

Start Date

23-3-2018 2:00 PM

End Date

23-3-2018 3:30 PM

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Mar 23rd, 2:00 PM Mar 23rd, 3:30 PM

“Notre avenir, c’est nous qui le choisissons! #PolQC”: Twitter, political discourse, and the modern Québécois nationalist identity

Waves Cafeteria

Québec’s struggle for independence has come to define its identity and political agendas. To the Québécois, the quote “Je me souviens,” reflecting the Québécois nationalist discourse (cf. Heller & Labrie, 2004) entails a past in which an anglophone minority marginalized the francophone majority, limiting their political, social, cultural, and even linguistic rights (Oakes & Warren, 2009). Québécois political parties, including the Bloc Québécois (BQ), the Parti Québécois (PQ), and the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ), continue to invoke elements of this discourse through their media communications to frame their perspectives on the modern Québécois identity (Oakes & Warren, 2009), political ideologies (van Dijk, 2002), and platforms (Parmelee & Bichard, 2012), including Twitter, a micro-blogging tool for mass communication (Zappavigna, 2013).

We formed a corpus of these parties’ Twitter feeds from just before the January 2017 mosque attacks in Québec City until one month after the attacks. We performed a political discourse analysis (van Dijk, 1997) on the tweets, using the program MaxQDA. Our analysis will focus on the following questions:

  1. How do the PQ, the BQ, and the CAQ express their political identities and purposes through tweets?
  1. Which political ideologies are represented in these parties’ tweets; what are points of convergence and divergence among them?

Initial findings suggest that all three parties invoke symbolic elements of the Québécois identity in their tweets, identifying the Québécois as victims of the Canadian federal government’s aggression. The majority of the BQ’s and PQ’s tweets advocate for Québec’s political independence on both the federal and the international stage, while the CAQ focuses on Québec’s domestic issues. Each party also portrays itself as the protector of the interests of other minoritized populations. Thus, while the parties’ tweets maintain historicity with traditional nationalist discourse, they also indicate a new discourse valorizing diversity and globalization.

Summary

This poster presents a political discourse analysis of 3 Québécois political parties’ tweets, focusing on the parties’ expression of political and cultural identity. While each party maintains historicity, identifying the Québécois as victims of the Canadian federal government; the tweets also indicate a new discourse valorizing diversity and globalization.