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You and Your Profile
Identity After Authenticity
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Narrated by:
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James Romick
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Written by:
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Hans-Georg Moeller
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Paul J. D'Ambrosio
About this listen
We present ourselves and encounter others through profiles. A profile shows us not as we are seen directly but how we are perceived by a broader public. As we observe how others observe us, we calibrate our self-presentation accordingly. Profile-based identity is evident everywhere from pop culture to politics, marketing to morality. But all too often critics simply denounce this alleged superficiality in defense of some supposedly pure ideal of authentic or sincere expression.
This book argues that the profile marks an epochal shift in our concept of identity and demonstrates why that matters. You and Your Profile blends social theory, philosophy, and cultural critique to unfold an exploration of the way we have come to experience the world. Instead of polemicizing against the profile, Hans-Georg Moeller and Paul J. D'Ambrosio outline how it works, how we readily apply it in our daily lives, and how it shapes our values - personally, economically, and ethically. They develop a practical vocabulary of life in the digital age.
Informed by the Daoist tradition, they suggest strategies for handling the pressure of social media by distancing oneself from one's public face. A deft and wide-ranging consideration of our era's identity crisis, this book provides vital clues on how to stay sane in a time of proliferating profiles.
©2021 Columbia University Press (P)2021 TantorWhat listeners say about You and Your Profile
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- Anonymous User
- 2024-04-27
interesting ideas confusing presentation
For a book about technologies of identity formation, it's frustrating that they only directly address "identity" in the second to last chapter. The argument was interesting enough that I might revisit it, but I found my understanding was impacted by their ordering of material. For example, while describing their core concept "profilicity," the authors took pains to insist that "profilicity" should not be judged by the criteria used to judge authenticity. Most of this repetitive argumentation could have been avoided completely, simply by changing the ordering of material in the book.
Identity, sincerity, authenticity, and profilicity all logically build off of each other, but the order in the book is profilicity, sincerity, authenticity, identity.
There's definitely some interesting material here, and there are Concepts I would like to adopt. But the material would have benefited from a more logical presentation.
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