Alex Halavais writing nonymously on identity

…and remap­ping the social graph.

I think this ten­dency to have more dif­fuse iden­ti­ties or to be at the cen­ter (ego­is­ti­cally speak­ing) or a larger set of inde­pen­dent social net­works has much in com­mon with the move from agrar­ian vil­lages and the mod­ern metrop­o­lis. Some­one raised in a rural area is likely to go to school with, date, and work with the same social group for much of their life. In the city, you may be a very dif­fer­ent per­son in the office than you are in your neigh­bor­hood or in the clubs. The com­plex­ity of the phys­i­cal space of the city allows for bar­ri­ers between var­i­ous per­for­mances of iden­tity and inter­ac­tions among ref­er­ence groups.

and later

This idea of a vil­lage within the metrop­o­lis isn’t new to blog­ging: it is some­times termed a tribe (bund). I think blog­ging allows for not a “global vil­lage” in the McCluhan­ian sense, but for the emer­gence of more cen­tral iden­ti­ties and social net­works that more fre­quently over­lap. Since pri­vate, cor­po­rate, and pub­lic life are increas­ingly inter­pen­e­trated any­way, doesn’t it make sense to look for mod­els and tech­nolo­gies that allow us to work and play bet­ter in such an environment?

I’ve long thought that we choose the stereo­types by which we define our own lives from the same menu used by oth­ers. So, we are reminded to ask: Are we new­fan­gled peo­ple sub­di­vid­ing our lives into more smaller pieces, each aimed at dif­fer­ent audi­ence into which we want to blend? If we’re blessed with finite resources, what does fur­ther sub­di­vi­sion do to the qual­ity, the depth, and the value of each of our roles?

While it is some folks’ intu­ition that life today is shal­lower, that has always been a preva­lent intu­ition [“kids these days…”]. If there really are deep qual­i­ta­tive dif­fer­ences between now and back then, well… all bets are off and his­tory is of lit­tle use in know­ing what’s com­ing. But if noth­ing deep has changed, we should really be ask­ing: Where is the evi­dence of the many over­lap­ping lives lived by our forebears?

This entry was posted in Uncategorized by Tozier. Bookmark the permalink.

2 thoughts on “Alex Halavais writing nonymously on identity

  1. Is it pos­si­ble that a per­son might behave dif­fer­ently or mod­ify his iden­tity at the local brew and screw than he does at the church of prairie bliss.

    It is absurd to assume that the gen­eral prin­ci­ples of human behav­ior change at the city lim­its. There may be more options but the fun­da­men­tals still apply.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>