| Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or personal tools. |
The cyberself: the self-ing project goes online, symbolic interaction in the digital ageUniversity of California at Los Angeles, USA Juxtaposing symbolic interactionist and postmodern interpretations of cyberself-ing, I bring data to bear on the tensions between these two theoretical stances. I argue that postmodernist accounts are no longer tenable; such studies were based on multi-user domains (MUDs), but generalized to cyberspace. I examine the evolving internet population, which has reached a critical mass of the American population, to demonstrate that MUD users no longer constitute the majority of users. After substantiating this shift in the user base, I elucidate evidence that corroborates the countervailing thesis of socialized online selves. I argue that using a symbolic interactionist perspective to frame the cyberself-ing project allows us to understand the creation of the cyber I,me, and digital generalized other, as well as the dynamics of interactional cuing online.
Key Words: Goffman internet user population Mead postmodernism
New Media & Society, Vol. 9, No. 1,
93-110 (2007) This article has been cited by other articles:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||

