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What is Looking Glass Self

Handbook of Research on Technoself: Identity in a Technological Society
Charles Horton Cooley used the concept of looking glass self to claim that one’s self depends on social interaction and on the perception of others. Individuals renegotiate their selves based on how they think to be perceived by others; the process of identity creation depends on an imagined societal perspective.
Published in Chapter:
The Language of Technoself: Storytelling, Symbolic Interactionism, and Online Identity
Federica Fornaciari (University of Illinois at Chicago, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-2211-1.ch004
Abstract
The goal of this chapter is to suggest theoretical means to address a fundamental question, what strategies do people use when presenting their selves online? This implies another question, how do people react to the context collapse when shaping their online profiles? The chapter analyzes the concept of identity and provides an analytical approach to the presentation of self online where traditional contextual and non-verbal cues lack. It tackles the issue of self presentation online through the frameworks of symbolic interactionism and narrative theory. The initial hypothesis is that individuals create online selves based on their offline selves; they attempt to shape online personas using similar communication strategies than in the offline world, but do so lacking traditional social cues, and this may generate dissonance for individuals who struggle defining the features of an imagined audience.
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