July 31, 2010
I Tweet, Therefore I Am
A thought provoking piece from The New York Times questioning whether Twitter posts are an expression of who we are — or are they changing who we are?
... Back in the 1950s, the sociologist Erving Goffman famously argued that all of life is performance: we act out a role in every interaction, adapting it based on the nature of the relationship or context at hand.
Twitter has extended that metaphor to include aspects of our experience that used to be considered off-set: eating pizza in bed, reading a book in the tub, thinking a thought anywhere, flossing. Effectively, it makes the greasepaint permanent, blurring the lines not only between public and private but also between the authentic and contrived self. If all the world was once a stage, it has now become a reality TV show: we mere players are not just aware of the camera; we mug for it.
emily | 8:55 AM |
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The Permanent Link to this page is: http://www.textually.org/textually/archives/2010/07/026504.htm
The Permanent Link to this page is: http://www.textually.org/textually/archives/2010/07/026504.htm

