@article{DangAnhRuediger2018, author = {Mark Dang-Anh and Jan Oliver R{\"u}diger}, title = {From Frequency to Sequence: How Quantitative Methods Can Inform Qualitative Analysis of Digital Media Discourse}, series = {10plus1: Living Linguistics}, volume = {1}, publisher = {Martin-Luther-Universit{\"a}t Halle-Wittenberg}, address = {Halle (Saale)}, issn = {2366-0562}, url = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-52776-8}, pages = {57 -- 73}, year = {2018}, abstract = {This paper aims at showing how quantitative corpus linguistic analysis can inform qualitative analysis of digital media discourse with respect to the mediality of language in use. Using the example of protest discourse in Twitter, in the field of anti-Islamic ‘Pegida’ demonstrations, a three-step method of collecting, reducing and interpreting salient data is proposed. Each step is aligned with operative medial features of the microblog: hashtags, retweets and @-interactions. The exemplary analysis reveals the importance of discussions of attendance numbers in protest discourse and the asymmetry between administrative (i.e. the police) and non-administrative discourse agents. Furthermore, it exemplifies how frequency analysis and sequence analysis can be combined for research in media linguistics.}, language = {en} }