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“Do You Want to Be a Well-Informed Citizen, or Do You Want to Be Sane?” Social Media, Disability, Mental Health, and Political Marginality

机译:“你想成为一个知情人士的公民,还是想成为理智?”社交媒体,残疾,心理健康和政治边际

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This article examines the experiences of people with disabilities, a traditionally marginalized group in US politics, with social media platforms during the 2016 presidential election. Using focus groups with participants with a wide range of disabilities, the significance of YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook is discussed. Results highlight ambivalent experiences with these platforms, which support some elements of political inclusion (more accessible and more relevant election information) but at the same time also exacerbate aspects of marginality (stress, anxiety, isolation). Four coping strategies devised by participants to address digital stress (self-censorship, unfollowing/unfriending social media contacts, signing off, and taking medication) are illustrated. The relationship between these contrasting findings, social media design and affordances, as well as potential strategies to eliminate an emerging trade-off between discussing politics online and preserving mental health and social connectedness for people with disabilities are discussed.
机译:本文介绍了在2016年总统选举中的社交媒体平台的传统上边缘化集团的残疾人的经验。使用具有广泛残疾的参与者的焦点小组,讨论了YouTube,Twitter和Facebook的重要性。结果突出了这些平台的矛盾体验,这些平台支持了一些政治包容性的元素(更可靠,更相关的选举信息),但同时也加剧了边缘度的方面(压力,焦虑,隔离)。参与者以参与者解决数字压力的四项应对策略(自我审查,不友好/不友好的社交媒体接触,签署和服用药物)。讨论了这些对比调查结果,社交媒体设计和能力的关系,以及消除在网上讨论政治的新出现权衡之间的潜在策略,并为残疾人造成智力健康和社会关联。

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