David Wästerfors
Professor
The bumpy paths of online sleuthing: Exploring the interactional accomplishment of familiarity, evidence, and authority in online crime discussions
Author
Summary, in English
Much of today’s public discourse on crime cases take place on online platforms, as long chains of high-speed posts: speculations, analyses, and laments, as well as ironic, sarcastic, and derogatory comments. These give excellent (and yet risky) possibilities to engage in homemade investigation, with other posters as instant reviewers and audiences. In this article, we explore the interactional origin of case-related familiarity, evidence and authority in crime discussions on the Swedish platform Flashback. Through Internet data and interviews, we show how online sleuths interact digitally with one another so that familiarity with the case is performed, leads and evidence suggested, and investigative authority recognized. We argue that an interactionist and ethnographic approach is needed to uncover such recurring processes in online crime case discussions. The accomplishment of sleuthing is highly dependent on others’ shifting responses, and is, therefore, a “bumpy” path.
Department/s
- Sociology
- Department of Sociology
Publishing year
2024
Language
English
Pages
6289-6306
Publication/Series
New Media & Society
Volume
26
Issue
11
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Topic
- Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Anthropology, Demography and Criminology)
Keywords
- crime case discussions
- digital ethnography
- interaction
- online sleuthing
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1461-4448