Hate Speech in Online Communities: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Power Relations, Identity Construction, and Discursive Normalization

Authors

  • Dinda Sabrina Universitas Negeri Medan
  • Meliana Napitu Universitas Negeri Medan
  • Royhan Nabil Universitas Negeri Medan
  • Setiawan Anugrah Zendrato Universitas Negeri Medan
  • Muhammad Natsir Universitas Negeri Medan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55606/sscj-amik.v4i3.6188

Keywords:

Critical Discourse Analysis, Digital Discourse, Hate Speech, Online Communities, Power Relations

Abstract

The phenomenon of hate speech within online communities has intensified alongside the expansion of digital space as an arena of open and intensive social interaction, thereby generating new challenges in understanding power relations, identity, and contemporary communicative practices. This study aims to examine how hate speech is produced, normalized, and interpreted within online communities through a qualitative approach employing a critical case study design grounded in Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA). Data were collected through in-depth interviews with 15 to 20 participants who are active social media users, observations of digital interactions, and document analysis comprising online comments and posts. Data analysis was conducted using a thematic approach integrated with the CDA framework to uncover the relationships among language, ideology, and power relations. The findings reveal three principal patterns: the normalization of hate speech as a form of "community language"; the operation of power relations in an implicit manner within digital interactions; and the complex processes of identity negotiation among participants, encompassing strategies of resistance, adaptation, and withdrawal. These findings illuminate the fact that hate speech functions not merely as a linguistic practice but also as a mechanism for the reproduction of social inequality that has become internalized within everyday digital life. Theoretically, this study enriches CDA scholarship by emphasizing the dimensions of subjective experience and moral ambiguity in discursive practice, while practically offering implications for the strengthening of critical digital literacy, content moderation policy, and more contextually sensitive social intervention in addressing the dynamics of hate speech in the digital era.

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Published

2026-05-31

How to Cite

Dinda Sabrina, Meliana Napitu, Royhan Nabil, Setiawan Anugrah Zendrato, & Muhammad Natsir. (2026). Hate Speech in Online Communities: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Power Relations, Identity Construction, and Discursive Normalization. Student Scientific Creativity Journal, 4(3), 370–385. https://doi.org/10.55606/sscj-amik.v4i3.6188

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