Brand Silence in Protest Movements: Commercial Brands’ Discursive Indifference duringa Social Protest in Peru

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Abstract

The study aims to politically analyze the narrative traits of protesting the indifference of commercial brands toward Peru’s political mobilization in November 2020 via Facebook. From a multiple-case qualitative focus, the corpus was gathered through the semiotic pertinence of representation by the isotopic saturation. The object of the study comprises 110 comments from protesters posted on the public profiles of brands that did not participate in the political protest. The pertinence of their election corresponded to the level of affinity and affection Peruvian consumers had with the brands. Based on the post-Greimasian theory, we have identified four narrative traits of protesting—exclaiming, complaining, repudiating, and wavering—over the brands. Consequently, data showed that consumers exclaimed against “their” brand, complained about the brand, repudiated the institution, and wavered over institutionality (something undefined). We identified three forms of dissemination: i) those enunciated from the Selfand concerning the brands, (ii) those enunciated toward the brands, and (iii) those enunciated toward the collective self, concerning the brands. This study seeks to contribute to the literature about the narrative relationship between political consumersand brands, protests and consumption, and corporate crisis management.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)51-70
Number of pages19
JournalJournal of Narrative and Language Studies
Volume12
Issue number24
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

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