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Peiwen NM3225

Cala - Transgender in Second Life: Second Life is a Post-Gender environment - 0 views

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    Second Life enables people to interact on an equal level with one another because discographies of the players are not made known to others.Hence,people's real identities are protected and they can truly express who they want to be in the game.
Peiwen NM3225

Digital identity (individual online identities) [PDF] - 0 views

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    Avatars are often used as an online representation if a user and may or may not resemble the user's real life self.Reasons why people take on multiple identities online:freedom in the exploration of other forms of existence,opportunities for those whom have been marginalised in society to express their opinions freely without the fear of being discriminated against etc.\n\nHowever,the blurring of boundaries between the digital and real world could lead to implications such as people spending too much time on the Internet and even forgoing real life interactions with people.They submerge themselves in their online identities (sometimes possessing multiple online identities) and may develop a multi-identity syndrome if not monitored closely.
C C

Constructions & Reconstuctions of Self in Virtual Reality - 0 views

shared by C C on 22 Mar 09 - Cached
  • unparalleled opportunity to play with one's identity and to "try out" new ones
  • All provide worlds for social interaction in a virtual space, worlds in which you can present yourself as a "character," in which you can be anonymous, in which you can play a role as close or as far away from your "real self" as you choose.
  • Engagement with computational technology facilitates a series of "second chances" for adults to work and rework unresolved personal issues and more generally, to think through questions about the nature of self, including questions about definitions of life, intentionality, and intelligence.
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  • what can be counted on as real in virtual space.
  • examine it, do something new with it, and revise her relationship towards it
  • not for escape but as a vehicle for engaging in a significant dialogue with important events and relationships in her "real" life
  • But of course, for most people such recreations of self are difficult. Virtual worlds provide environments for experiences that may be hard to come by in the real.
  • play with no concern that "he," Peter, will be held accountable in "real life" for his character's actions, quarrels, or relationships
  • possibilities the medium offers for projecting both conscious and unconscious aspects of the self
  • Identity, after all, literally means one. When we live through our electronic self-representations we have unlimited possibilities to be many. People become masters of self-presentation and self-creation. The very notion of an inner, "true self" is called into question.
  • game allows its players to experience rather than merely observe what it feels like to be the opposite gender or to have no gender at all
  • Virtual reality is not "real," but it has a relationship to the real. By being betwixt and between, it becomes a play space for thinking about the real world. It is an exemplary evocative object.
C C

Who Am We?, Sherry Turkle - 0 views

shared by C C on 22 Mar 09 - Cached
  • multiple personae, romance, and what can be counted on as "real" in virtual space
  • As players participate, they become authors not only of text but of themselves, constructing new selves through social interaction.
  • The anonymity of MUDs gives people the chance to express multiple and often unexplored aspects of the self, to play with their identity and to try out new ones. MUDs make possible the creation of an identity so fluid and multiple that it strains the limits of the notion. Identity, after all, refers to the sameness between two qualities, in this case between a person and his or her persona. But in MUDs, one can be many.
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  • Creating screen personae is thus an opportunity for self-expression, leading to her feeling more like her true self when decked out in an array of virtual masks.
  • The integration of the social Achilles, who can talk about his troubles, and the asocial Stewart, who can only cope by putting them out of mind, has not occurred.
  • And once we take virtuality seriously as a way of life, we need a new language for talking about the simplest things. Each individual must ask: What is the nature of my relationships? What are the limits of my responsibility? And even more basic: Who and what am I? What is the connection between my physical and virtual bodies? And is it different in different cyberspaces? These questions are equally central for thinking about community. What is the nature of our social ties? What kind of accountability do we have for our actions in real life and in cyberspace? What kind of society or societies are we creating, both on and off the screen?
  • The culture of simulation may help us achieve a vision of a multiple but integrated identity whose flexibility, resilience, and capacity for joy comes from having access to our many selves.
guanyou chen

recursiveProgress: Piling on 2: "The Importance of Identity" Online and off - 0 views

  • "ID is at the center." Whether the context is commercial transactions and ecommerce online, business-to-business activity, public/national security and safety, or just plain old making it through the complexities of everyday life, presenting and proving ourselves to others precedes all other activity. It is, in effect, becoming the price of entry in all manners of civil society.
    • guanyou chen
       
      Identity as the currency of social exchanges.
C C

Thinking Cyber-Subjectivity - 0 views

  • possibilities opened up and promised by it to fashion new subjectivity as fluid, decentered, heterogeneous, playful, and malleable.
  • inherent inequality of cyberspace in distributing social resources among different classes or genders
  • reduce forms of identity in real life to mere signs floating freely in transmission and exchange on the net
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  • Identity becomes infinitely plastic in a play of images that knows no end. Consistency is no longer a virtue but becomes a vice; integration is limitation. With everything always shifting, everyone is no one"
  • he disruption and multiplication of the old identity as the coherent and homogeneous one into the fragmented and heterogeneous many
  • For even though the modernist identity is quite stable, it is still hard to argue that it is perfectly seamless and totally cohesive without any leak and disruption. Identity, in its general sense, is the result of identification processes achieved by individuals on a communal basis. If subjectivity is closely related to and even equated with identity as writers mentioned would argue, we have reason to believe that community is the leading factor in the formation of identity and subjectivity. Following this, even individuals in the modernist period would never take part in or belong merely to one community but many, some of which may even stand in conflict with each other.
  • How can a group of fragmented, fluid, disintegrated subjects perform identification to reach a possible identity?
  • notion of multiple identities runs basically against any supposition of a community that is mainly "based upon honest communication"
  • aporia between theory and practice
Joanna Tan

Do you need a Web publicist? - 0 views

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    Membership systems are no remedy, and they won't stop a person who wants to disrupting your site. But they offer a way to connect a website's community to a real person, and that person to their actions. It works to limit the disinhibitory effects of online behavior (the more negative ones) and creates a subtle but important psychological difference between an anonymous visitor and a known community member.
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    The Internet has matured to a point where so much of one's life is online that some people need methods of self-promotion and self-protection, concepts usually associated with the imagemakers of politicians and Hollywood stars. As more employers, workers, and singles use the Internet to check someone out, the idea of managing one's online presence doesn't sound so strange.
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