Abstract

This paper aims to investigate identity construction on a social network site, the largest microblog platform, Sina Microblog, in China. By focusing on the action types and language use in the status updates and personal profiles of ten college student users from China together with individual interviews, this study finds that microblog users employ a variety of strategies to construct their online identities, such as different action types; visual, enumerative, narrative and self-labelling practices; and different forms of internet language. The results also show that microblog users tend to use more implicit identity claims and strategically use language to construct situation-appropriate multiple identities, using identity rhetoric to achieve some communicative needs. The user, displayed friends and distant audiences triangulate to mould and portray their online identities on the Sina Microblog. The related factors that shape identity construction are described, and the implications of these findings are discussed.

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