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From “Is” to the (News) World: How Facebook Jeopardized Its Life-Diary Nature and Occupied the Network
Author(s) -
Stefano Calzati,
Roberto Simanowski
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of transmedia literacy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2465-227X
pISSN - 2465-2261
DOI - 10.7358/ijtl-2019-001-casi
Subject(s) - narrative , narratology , posthuman , connotation , context (archaeology) , sociology , media studies , biography , identity (music) , psychology , aesthetics , literature , art , history , linguistics , philosophy , archaeology
This article focuses on self-narratives and identity construction in the context of social networking sites (SNSs). It does so by discussing the findings of a research that had at its core a practice-based module titled “Facebook and Autobiography”, which was designed and taught at a major Hong Kong University. Through a cyber autoethnographic approach, which aligns to the methodological orientation of the second wave in narratology studies, the research explores how the infrastructure of Facebook affects the processes of self-narration in comparison with traditional written dairies. Contrary to previous studies, the interviews with students-participants and the analysis of their Facebook’s profiles suggest that the retrieval on Facebook of even small self-narratives is impaired by the fact that the platform has abandoned its life-diary orientation in favour of a news-based business model where the posthuman connotation of profiles prevails.

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