Acoustic Academic: Sonic Stories from Social Sciences

Maria Murumaa-Mengel

Welcome to Acoustic Academic: Sonic Stories from Social Sciences, the podcast - actually, academic ASMR is more fitting for a genre description - that brings you the soothing sounds of intellectual exploration. Join Maria Murumaa-Mengel (PhD in media and communication), as we delve into social scientific research. After all: empirical studies are systematically presented stories in the end, so let me tell you stories about online shaming, influencers, digital activism, and so much more. Acoustic Academic is here to make academic literature accessible and enjoyable.

Episodes

  1. 12/16/2025

    Starving the Rage Farmers or Actively Fighting Back: How to Audience on Social Media

    In this episode of academic ASMR you will get an overview of several studies that allow us to take a new recontextualizing look at a common theme, so far unexplored. We propose the development of a theoretical concept, “audience literacies,” a subset of social media literacies that themselves are a part of digital literacies but also interwoven with media and information literacies. We argue that both being aware of the different audiences of one’s messages and regulating oneself as a member of various audiences entails crucial skills, knowledge, values, and attitudes. In our opinion, people as audiences deserve a longer exploration to understand how messages are being encoded and decoded or when people apply civil inattention and look away, pretending not to listen or ignoring the conversations as a social norm of respect. Moving from more passive modes of participation and “being an audience” (Invisible Audiences) to more active practices of audiencing (Resilient Reactors and Activist Produsers), we hope that understanding these roles enables us to navigate the digital landscape with greater awareness and intentionality. The episode is based on this academic publication: Murumaa-Mengel, M., Klaassen, M. (2025). From Civil Inattention to Digital Activism: Audience Literacies Within the Social Media Literacies Framework. In: Özel, M. (eds) Digital Literacy as a Catalyst for Critical Thinking (pp.113-133). Springer, Cham.

    49 min
  2. 06/20/2024

    Shaming Men on Instagram - Five Types of Shamings

    The aim of this article is to explore the audience and moderator types on Instagram's misogynist content exposé pages (MCEPs)-where people share and shame screenshots depicting gendered online hate, harassment, and men's sexual entitlement. We have framed our study with concepts like refracted publics, imagined audiences, and shaming as a social practice, and we set out to look for communicative shaming practices beyond the theoretically well-established reintegrative/disintegrative distinction. Analysis of qualitative online interviews with the moderators of MCEPs (n = 6), combined with both qualitative and quantitative content analysis of the posts' captions (n = 100) and comments (n = 1325) helps us understand the mechanisms, types, and aims of online shamings and dive deeper into understanding the different roles people take in these communicative practices. Results of this study present five main types of shamings and the linked moderator and audience types: pedagogic shaming (moderators as Educators, audiences as Instructors), denunciatory shaming (Judges and Angry Mobbers), recreational shaming (Entertainers and Jokesters), participative shaming (Community Builders and Support Squadders) and reflective shaming (Looking Glasses and Mirrors). Theoretical types can be combined and modified in practice, based on the strategies the moderators are using, aims of communication, and specific constellations of audiences. The episode is based on this academic publication: Murumaa-Mengel, M. & Muuli, L.-M. (2021). Misogynist content exposé pages on Instagram: Five types of shamings, moderators and audience members. Participations: Journal of Audience & Reception Studies, 18(2): 100-123.

    1h 7m
  3. 06/14/2024

    Veebiintervjuud, projektiivtehnikad ja loovuurimismeetodid

    Millised võimalused avanevad uurijale, kui aeg ja ruum on uuringus osalejate jaoks paindlikud tegurid? Kuidas kombineerida online’i ja offline’i, et paremini mõista inimeste igapäevaelu, tajutud tähendusi, väärtushinnanguid ja tõekspidamisi? Kuidas viia läbi Zoomi-intervjuud? Kas fookusgruppi saab üldse veebipõhiselt korraldada, kaotamata meetodi peamisi tugevusi? Kuidas pakkuda digitalletavas süsteemis uuringus osalejatele anonüümsust ja konfidentsiaalsust? Kuidas leevendada „küsitlusväsimust“ ja pakkuda mängurõõmu? Need on vaid mõned küsimused, millele siinses peatükis põhjalikumalt keskendun ja vastuseid otsin. Peatükk algab ülevaatega sünkroonsetest ja asünkroonsetest kvalitatiivsetest intervjuudest, mis võivad toimuda ekraani vahendusel nii suuliselt kui ka kirjalikult. Sünkroonsus tähendab siin kontekstis seda, et uurija(d) ja osaleja(d) on intervjuusituatsioonis ühel ajal, tegemist on voogsuhtlusega. Asünkroonsus viitab aga sellele, et iga osapool valib endale sobiva tempo ning intervjuu on suuremal või vähemal määral vaba fikseeritud ajalistest raamidest ja tavapärase intervjuusituatsiooni kohesusest, tegemist on viivissuhtlusega. Järgneb alapeatükk sellest, mida võiks pidada silmas veebi vahendusel toimuvate rühmaintervjuude puhul. Kuna kvalitatiivsetes uuringutes püütakse sageli kombineerida erinevaid andmekogumisvõtteid, mis annaksid uuritavast mitmekülgsema ülevaate, tutvustan peatüki teises pooles intervjuudes kasutatavaid erinevaid projektiivtehnikaid ja loovuurimismeetodite võimalusi ja piiranguid, mis võivad esineda veebi vahendusel tehtavates või veebifenomene käsitlevates kvalitatiivsetes uuringutes. See osa põhineb mõned aastad tagasi ilmunud raamatupeatükil: Murumaa-Mengel, M. (2020). Veebiintervjuud, projektiivtehnikad ja loovuurimismeetodid. In: A. Masso, K. Tiidenberg, A. Siibak (Toim.). Kuidas mõista andmestunud maailma? Metodoloogiline teejuht (707−738). Tallinn: Tallinna Ülikooli kirjastus.

    55 min
  4. 06/09/2023

    Shaming for Fun: A Study about Recreational Shaming Groups of Facebook

    As social life and communication move increasingly online, we have experienced the expansion of online shaming – different forms of (semi)public cross-platform condemnation of people and their actions by (mass) online audiences. Online shamings can be analysed as combinations of reintegrative (shame-correct-forgive) and disintegrative (shame-stigmatise-expel) social sanctioning practices, usually focusing the ‘serious’ disciplinary shaming on the behaviour of the offender. We propose that equal attention should be given to what we have termed ‘recreational shaming’ – humour-based playful collective shaming that often occurs via online platforms, seemingly just for the sake of shaming, motivated mainly by social belonging needs and entertainment gratification. By combining the results of standardised content analysis of Facebook recreational shaming groups (n = 65) and in-depth qualitative interviews with the ‘modmins’ of the groups (n = 8) we will give an overview of what is being shamed, how groups and modministrators create and enforce rules and what is the socio-cultural perceived meaning of this practice. We distinguish three spheres of recreational shaming that ‘frame the shame’ and demonstrate how recreational online shaming is often more about the self than the other – me performing the act of shaming for entertainment value, to belong in a group. Additionally, we introduce how shaming is used as a self-reflexive tool for behaviour-correction or base knowledge for dominant tastes. The episode is based on this academic publication: Murumaa-Mengel, M., & Lott, K. (2023). ‘Recreational shaming groups of Facebook: Content, rules and modministrators’ perspectives’. Convergence, OnlineFirst. https://doi.org/10.1177/13548565231176184

    1h 10m

About

Welcome to Acoustic Academic: Sonic Stories from Social Sciences, the podcast - actually, academic ASMR is more fitting for a genre description - that brings you the soothing sounds of intellectual exploration. Join Maria Murumaa-Mengel (PhD in media and communication), as we delve into social scientific research. After all: empirical studies are systematically presented stories in the end, so let me tell you stories about online shaming, influencers, digital activism, and so much more. Acoustic Academic is here to make academic literature accessible and enjoyable.