Publication
Title
The visual digital self : a discourse theoretical analysis of young people's negotiations on gender, reputation and sexual morality online
Author
Abstract
Young people’s self-presentations on Instagram often display considerate discourses on gender, reputation and (sexual) morality. Previous studies have explored how these discourses are embedded in cultural narratives, while overseeing the significance of visibility and visual storytelling cultures online. Using a Foucauldian Feminist approach, we explore how young people’s discourses reflect the visual performance of aesthetic and neoliberal subjectivities online. Through six groups of young people between thirteen and twenty years old, we investigate how the visibility afforded by Instagram affects the negotiations of young people on gender, reputation and sexual morality. We gave them the agency to create, narrate and reflect upon fictious social media profiles with ‘good’, ‘bad’ or ‘ideal’ self-presentations, using a discourse theoretical analysis to examine the visual artefacts, individual stories and group conversations. Our analysis shows that youth’s discourses on self-presentation are based on a dynamic relation between self-determination and self-monitoring. Ideal self-presentations are understood as self-determining performances of visual, aesthetic and neoliberal subjectivities, whereas bad self-presentations are often negotiated as self-monitoring performances regarding sexual morality.
Language
English
Source (journal)
DiGeSt : journal of diversity and gender studies. - Ghent, 2014, currens
Publication
Ghent : Academia Press , 2021
ISSN
2593-0273 [print]
2593-0281 [online]
DOI
10.21825/DIGEST.V8I1.17608
Volume/pages
8 :1 (2021) , p. 22-40
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Research group
Publication type
Subject
External links
Record
Identifier
Creation 23.10.2021
Last edited 22.08.2023
To cite this reference