Aline Roes Dalmolin 92 pirical element the communication developed within the Bolsonarist information bubbles. This mediasphere is equipped with its own communicational processes, in which the supercode, re- active agenda-setting, and biopolitical hatred predominate. Without allowing adjustments and inferences to be made and closing itself off to the presence of the other, the com- munication process is exhausted, reducing itself to intense tautistic feedback and establishing processes of de-circulation and communicational barbarism. In this context, communication is established as a war of all against all, distancing itself from the necessary perspective of stimulating the encounter with the other and the search for the common, advocated respectively by Martin Buber and Muniz Sodré. Considering the above, it is necessary to move forward in the search for ways to combat barbarism, readapting to the cur- rent context the opposition initially developed by Rosa Luxemburgo of socialism against barbarism to communication against barbarism. Contrary to what is advocated by themajority position within the Democratic field in the country, which is concerned about the advance of the extreme right media, the perspective de- veloped throughout this text shows that to combat its dangers, it is not enough just to try to “pierce the bubbles” in order to occupy positions of visibility within current communication logics. Above all, it is a challenge to destabilize the activation of the supercode and slow down the consolidation of non-circulatory circuits, proposing new pathways for argumentative reflection to freshen up the heavily worn-out processes of phatic repetition. By analyzing the characteristics of the structural, semantic, and processual levels of the media anatomy of the ex- treme right in Brazil, we have sought to advance the debate on the structure of polarization and its specific communication circuits. Much has been produced in the field of Communication Science and Social Sciences more broadly on the discourses, im- age, and strategies of the Bolsonarists and the far right in Brazil, but there are still few studies seeking to understand the specific communicative processes related to the extremist mediasphere in our country. In this way, this chapter has sought to contribute to the prospect of building a brief compilation of these charac- teristics, which will be further explored in subsequent studies.
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