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The clickbait titles in social networks from speech act theory

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The article analyzed the originality of the titles in clickbait videos that appear unexpectedly on the pages of the main virtualized social networks of Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, etc. The purpose of the study was to analyze clickbait headlines as directive illocutionary acts on clickbait video ma...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor: Loayza-Maturrano, Edward Faustino
Formato: artículo
Fecha de Publicación:2024
Institución:Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina
Repositorio:Revistas - Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina
Lenguaje:español
OAI Identifier:oai:revistas.lamolina.edu.pe:article/1867
Enlace del recurso:https://revistas.lamolina.edu.pe/index.php/tnu/article/view/1867
Nivel de acceso:acceso abierto
Materia:Noticias falsas
pragmática
análisis de corpus
fuerza ilocucionaria
redes sociales
Fake news
pragmatics
corpus analysis
illocutionary force
social networks
Descripción
Sumario:The article analyzed the originality of the titles in clickbait videos that appear unexpectedly on the pages of the main virtualized social networks of Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, etc. The purpose of the study was to analyze clickbait headlines as directive illocutionary acts on clickbait video material that appeared on virtualized social networks. The research methodology was qualitative, discourse analysis, which aimed to identify the meanings of the clickbait headlines as significant elements of the media text, and communicative-pragmatic analysis, which consists of determining the illocutionary force of the directives. The results show that the communicative success of clickbait headlines depends on the recipient’s level of knowledge of the information, which correlates with the perceiver’s degree of curiosity. Research in the media space shows that the recipient avoids excessive cognitive effort so they seek to evade clickbait headlines. The study concluded by stating that clickbait headlines allow them to be classified as a directive illocutionary act, since they deliberately obscure the nominative function itself and advance the advertising function to particularly influence the behavior of the recipient of the information.
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