Celebrity enactments of addiction on Twitter

Commentators suggest the social media platform, Twitter, might afford challenges to hegemonic knowledge by providing voice to those outside traditional media and by enabling vigorous public discussion and contestation of dominant ideas and concepts. In this article, we ask whether such affordances m...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dwyer, Robyn, Fraser, Suzanne
Format: Journal Article
Published: Sage 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/67001
_version_ 1848761448778432512
author Dwyer, Robyn
Fraser, Suzanne
author_facet Dwyer, Robyn
Fraser, Suzanne
author_sort Dwyer, Robyn
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Commentators suggest the social media platform, Twitter, might afford challenges to hegemonic knowledge by providing voice to those outside traditional media and by enabling vigorous public discussion and contestation of dominant ideas and concepts. In this article, we ask whether such affordances might be reshaping the culturally charged concept of addiction and, in turn, its accompanying abject and maligned subject, the ‘addict’. To explore this question, we examine Twitter messages about addiction posted by celebrities. These people are among the most highly followed Twitter account holders, meaning their Twitter messages can reach millions of people. Our analysis examines how specific addiction problems, and their solutions, are being constituted through the tweeting practices of celebrities. We also consider the unintentional effects these messages produce. Finally, we examine the ways in which these messages are discussed and contested by the audiences of the celebrities. We find celebrity Twitter activity re-enacts familiar realities of addiction, realities that collapse drug use with harm and addiction, addiction with pathology and death. Abstinence is posed as the only effective and genuine response, and the contradictions in simultaneously individualizing action against addiction and condemning stigmatization are ignored. Despite the ‘revolutionary’ potential of Twitter posited by advocates and some scholars, when it comes to addiction, it seems, the global, uncensored, ‘free’ communication on Twitter serves largely to validate and perpetuate dominant addiction concepts and the stigma and discrimination these concepts evoke.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T10:31:50Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-67001
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:31:50Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Sage
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-670012018-08-20T06:54:17Z Celebrity enactments of addiction on Twitter Dwyer, Robyn Fraser, Suzanne Commentators suggest the social media platform, Twitter, might afford challenges to hegemonic knowledge by providing voice to those outside traditional media and by enabling vigorous public discussion and contestation of dominant ideas and concepts. In this article, we ask whether such affordances might be reshaping the culturally charged concept of addiction and, in turn, its accompanying abject and maligned subject, the ‘addict’. To explore this question, we examine Twitter messages about addiction posted by celebrities. These people are among the most highly followed Twitter account holders, meaning their Twitter messages can reach millions of people. Our analysis examines how specific addiction problems, and their solutions, are being constituted through the tweeting practices of celebrities. We also consider the unintentional effects these messages produce. Finally, we examine the ways in which these messages are discussed and contested by the audiences of the celebrities. We find celebrity Twitter activity re-enacts familiar realities of addiction, realities that collapse drug use with harm and addiction, addiction with pathology and death. Abstinence is posed as the only effective and genuine response, and the contradictions in simultaneously individualizing action against addiction and condemning stigmatization are ignored. Despite the ‘revolutionary’ potential of Twitter posited by advocates and some scholars, when it comes to addiction, it seems, the global, uncensored, ‘free’ communication on Twitter serves largely to validate and perpetuate dominant addiction concepts and the stigma and discrimination these concepts evoke. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/67001 10.1177/1354856517714168 Sage restricted
spellingShingle Dwyer, Robyn
Fraser, Suzanne
Celebrity enactments of addiction on Twitter
title Celebrity enactments of addiction on Twitter
title_full Celebrity enactments of addiction on Twitter
title_fullStr Celebrity enactments of addiction on Twitter
title_full_unstemmed Celebrity enactments of addiction on Twitter
title_short Celebrity enactments of addiction on Twitter
title_sort celebrity enactments of addiction on twitter
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/67001