Abstract

The article aims to explore the phenomenon of the new media and their dual nature. The objective of the study is to investigate the essential attributes of the new media and present them as a set of binary oppositions: real – virtual, private – public, interpersonal – mass, broadcast – interaction. The author analyzes the new media as a sphere of virtual social being of the modern people, where they are faced with such issues as self-identification, adaptation, responsibility, distinction between true and false or private and public. On the one hand, the diffusion of real and virtual spheres turns online environment into a source of significant social connections. On the other hand, this gives the network identity a playful and changeable nature. Due to broadcasting and interactional models of mass communication coexisting simultaneously, a user immerses into the communication flows of everyone with everyone, where they could be both an influential creator and distributor of content, or a participant of endless chats for the sake of chats themselves. The diffusion between the interpersonal and mass communication leads to plurality and instability of the contexts to which a user belongs. The article examines the conflict potential of online activity through the opposition between the private and public spheres. It describes such effects as erosion of a genuinely public sphere, blending of the opposite social contexts, the phenomenon of hyperpublicity. In conclusion the author discusses a question about the creative activity of the Internet users and emphasizes that the new media environment provides them with opportunities for constructing self-narrative and joining into the global process of sharing ideas, meanings and digital artefacts. As a result, the users expand the borders of their own world, become more autonomous and self-actualizing.

Highlights

  • Electronic identity, many believe, provides the best opportunity to express who we really are or, in case this is not what we want, who we really would like to be

  • While it is accurate to say that new forms of communication allow for new modes of identity expression, it is, to say the least, problematic to assume that this relation is unconstrained or dictated by only one of the actors involved

  • Already here can we identify a mutual shaping relation, a relation well characterized in the following statement:

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Summary

Introduction

Electronic identity, many believe, provides the best opportunity to express who we really are or, in case this is not what we want, who we really would like to be. Technology and society interact and mutually shape each other; the same is true for new forms of identity and new technologies of communication. The perspective of mutual shaping of social actors and technology is one what I want to adapt in my future research on electronic identities.

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