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How can we explain our online identities?

This article explains the construction of online identities and images of the body with the help of theories by Jean-Paul Sartre and Michel Foucault.

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Today, we share our lives on social media more than ever before and Sartre and Foucault, who both offer very different frameworks for understanding our online identities, could possibly explain the behaviour of the users on these social platforms.

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Different online identities

The way we live our lives, what we consider moral, inappropriate or justifiable is a personal matter. Being a white queer female will most likely mean that you have a different outlook on life than your religious Arabic male neighbour. What we stand for and support says a lot about our identity as a person. Who we are shapes our lives and therefore, the decisions we make. 

In this article, we will tackle the issue of construction of online identities. With many explicitly different identities to be found on the web, you can put most of the profiles into boxes, but still, not one profile is the same as the other. This means that people with these identities all have different factors that determine their identity construction. They all have different sexualities ruling over their lives, and therefore, their profiles look different (Fig. 1). 

Online identities like these will serve as data to answer our questions. We will examine whether their online actions can be explained through Sartre's and Foucault's theories about behaviour and performed sexualities. Many people let their feelings and opinions take over, and they share them on online platforms. Motives behind it can differ. While some act as a spokesman for like-minded people, others might just do it impulsively, and do not realize that they are constructing an online identity, which often influences others. Can we explain the constructed identities and images of the body from our sample profiles? In our opinion, theories of Jean-Paul Sartre and Michel Foucault might yield some answers.

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Freedom as burden

According to Sartre, people shape themselves with the choices they make, and having a free choice is made possible with our awareness. This means that there is an immense case of freedom to deal with in our lives. We have the responsibility to create our lives by ourselves. Sartre claims that people regard this freedom in a way that turns it into a sort of a prison, which might have negative connotations (Schutijser, 2009).

Once freedom has broken loose in a human spirit, the gods will no longer have a grip (Sartre, 1983).

So are the consequences of freedom negative? This is unclear, as the only thing you can say is that certain ways of thinking and life, such as religion, no longer matter. This is because religion forms us before we can form ourselves (Donkers, personal communication 2015). But does the world not become chaotic without these pre-conceived lifestyles, morals and ideas? What is our foothold then? How do we deal with each other? What is good and what is bad? We are not uniform and everyone's opinions differ. This implies that there is no human nature since there is no God who could have conceived it. Man is in the first instance as he projects himself, not what he wants to be. Therefore, we begin as a blank slate - tabula rasa (Donkers, personal communication 2015).

This brings us to Sartre’s existentialism, the idea that man does not have a predetermined essence. After WWII people began to believe that man was 'thrown' into the world in which he was a victim of various circumstances. But we are all free - although victims, we are personally responsible because we chose our own destiny, it is not destined by faith. According to Sartre, man must decide for himself what kind of person he wants to be. The central idea is that man shapes himself through his choices (Sartre, 2007).

Only when you have made a choice, you can find out what it is that you want, or what you want to become (Donkers, personal communication 2015). Our existence is thus characterized by an inescapable freedom which brings responsibility, whether we want it or not. But this responsibility is also applicable to people around us. Every choice they make can also have consequences for others. According to Sartre, everyone will therefore always choose what seems to be right at that moment. By our choices, we show what a person in our situation should do. With that, we determine what is right for everyone else to do.

Sartre does not, however, deny that there are certain things that limit a man. For example, you have not been able to choose where and in what circumstances you were born, i.e. your language and culture have been given. Sometimes, things happen in life that you cannot do anything about. Think, for example, of accidents that make people blind or disabled. He calls these limitations factualities. Sartre says that people are completely free with how they deal with these factualities.

He also points out that many people try to escape their freedom by desperately clinging to a certain conception of who they are, an essence. This is called mauvaise foi (bad faith). According to Sartre, everyone has the choice to do this - he only sees it as a mistake. Mauvaise foi is actually living a lie. You cannot escape the true judgment. There are no values beforehand for humans. If you choose these values, and at the same time claim that they are pushing against you, you are in contradiction with yourself (Howells, 1988).

Holding onto a conception of who we are, mauvaise foi, is living a lie.

Another important concept for Sartre is abandonment, which says that people are not only stuck with the enormous burden of freedom but they cannot rely on predetermined morals, rules or laws while making choices, e.g. you cannot rely on Christianity when making your choices. This implies to be merciful, love your neighbour, devote your life to someone else, choose the most difficult way etc. But what is the most difficult road? Who should we love? Who can make a judgment about this beforehand? No one. No established morality can determine that for you.

The only thing left is our instinct. The feeling is then the only thing that matters. But how do you determine the value of a feeling? You can only say how much something means to you if you actually did it. So the feelings are in the actions you perform, you can be led by it and that will often be the only good option (Donkers, personal communication 2016). You cannot look inside yourself for an authentic state that brings you to act, nor with a morality that offers you guidelines that make your actions possible. You always have to make the choice yourself.

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Panoptic society

According to Foucault, we are not as free as we think we are. Our whole society is pervaded by power structures. There are norms which tell us how we should behave. Foucault sees society as a panopticon, which is the reason why people also live by these norms. Our society can be seen as a prison in which one is constantly observed, making him/her behave according to the norms (Fig. 2). This results in disciplining and normalization. We often unconsciously, submit to the rules of power structures in order to avoid punishment and disapproval.

Moreover, we tend to see the rules and norms as normal. Although Foucault says we are not aware of how power acts upon us, he does not necessarily see it as a bad thing. On the contrary, power is productive. It brings truth and order. As Foucault called it, pouvoir-savoir. Power is knowledge (Foucault, 2003). The more knowledge one has, the more powerful one becomes.  

For Foucault, the discussion about sexuality is not one of freedom at all. We are even manipulated to talk about sexuality. The more we talk about it, the more knowledge we have about this subject, and the more knowledge there is available, the more power can be exerted on us. We do not talk about sexuality because we think we are free, but it is expected from us (Wubbels, 2005). All this knowledge about sexuality also brought along what was seen as normal and abnormal sexuality.

The way sexuality is discussed is what Foucault calls the 'discours’. This can be defined as a construct of related concepts in which the world can be seen. So it creates a certain image of the world we live in. We connect all kinds of concepts to sexuality and relate this to different societal processes. The ‘discours’ creates power structure in society. Eventually, man will shape himself to fit in these power structures, which will form our sexuality (Schutijser, 2009).

Furthermore, the power structures we are part of are not universal. Foucault’s concept ‘souci de soi’ describes the self-care of a man. This self-care exists because, in principle, there is always a possibility to reach further than the current power structures and morality. This brings along the opportunity to form new identities. So, we do have the freedom to be different. We have the freedom to look differently at life and develop new identities, and Foucault says that creativity is essential. This freedom should be valued and used. The self-care of a man is the care to cross the boundaries of power structures, and universality claims in order to find oneself (Donkers, personal communication, 2015). 

When we look at Foucault’s findings, we can see that freedom has been decreased although we have the opportunity to be different. We adjust to the norms that rule the society because we do not want to be excluded, and think that these norms and power structures are normal. So you could say that we do not have our own identity and personality, as it is something mostly created from the outside. But why everyone is different?

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Case Studies - The Online Identities

Donald J. Trump

The president of the United States seems to be very occupied with creating an online identity, especially on his Twitter account (Fig. 3). This 'savagery' persona he created is not only filled with statements and opinions about how he sees life but was also a vital element in his presidential campaign. He projects a Republican view on life and is often linked with the values of the alternative-right, which is usually associated with anti-Enlightenment ideology - (white) ultranationalist and deeply conservative revolutionary empathies (Maly, 2018).  His fame as a public figure does seem to influence his online persona.

We think that if Sartre could comment on Trump's profile, he would say that this man knows how to deal with his ‘freedom’ on the web. His decisions about what to share are not stopped by anything or anybody, he just says what he thinks is right. Concerning his power and wealth (something we will come back to later), he barely deals with any faculties. He decided for himself what kind of leader he wants to be.

Regardless of being in the public eye, he shamelessly shares his thoughts, especially on Twitter (Fig. 4). He takes control over his own online personality, and even that helped him win the elections (Maly, 2018). Trump filled in his personality with the things he supports and believes in, and although these things may not always benefit others, they are things that he as a president wants to stand for. Changing himself just for the pleasure of others, e.g. to be a more loved figure, would be living a lie anyways - mauvaise foi.

Does this mean that Trump just impulsively created this image of himself? Possibly. On the other hand, he is very aware that he is watched and that his actions have an influence on the world. As mentioned, his online persona played a crucial role in winning the elections. The way he used language and online media to relate to the crowd with his ideology can be connected with Foucault’s idea of the panoptic society (Fig. 5). Trump knows he is being watched all the time, but instead of being influenced by the power structures around him, he takes matters into his own hands and uses this to strengthen his position.

He seems to have ’broken out' of prison, and therefore not  be affected by the normalization and disciplining, unlike most people. As a celebrity and millionaire, he neither has experienced punishment nor exclusion.

Most of us adjust to the norms that society offers us because we do not want to be excluded. Unlike Trump, we think that these norms and power structures are normal. But he took control and now is in charge himself. Foucault’s concept of ‘souci de soi’ seems to fit in here, which describes the self-care of a man. The possibility to reach further than the power structures and morals, gave Trump the ability to form his own new identity, as the US president. However, Foucault connects this with the freedom to be different. In our opinion, Trump used it more to his advantage, to become a power structure, as he imposes his morals on a large part of the Western society, which are different from what a lot of people stand for in the modern day.

Dalia Alfaghal

Dalia Alfaghal is an Egyptian female who came out as a lesbian through Facebook. Her post went viral and received a lot of critique from her fellow Middle Easterners. Following the incident, she has called herself 'the most hated lesbian in Egypt.' Since then she has been very vocal online and has been involved in the LGBTQ+ community about her sexuality and her rights. She has also been featured on Buzzfeed LGBT, where her story reached millions of people.

Dalia’s online presence embodies multiple concepts that Sartre and Foucault have designed. For example, Dalia represents Foucault’s ‘souci de soi’ principle. By coming out in such a public and influential way, she has taken matters into her own hands and formed her own identity, in spite of what norms her environment expected her to conform to. She clearly made use of the freedom to be different and her power to use creativity to deviate from current power structures that Sartre implies we all have. She found that she needed to make a choice for herself and her own well-being - the self-care of ‘souci de soi’ is complete.

Moreover, Dalia’s case could relate to Sartre’s concept of abandonment. She had an individual and personal dilemma, and could not rely on her environment, cultural values, religion or any other influences to help her with this decision. She had to trust her instincts, feelings and nothing else. She chose a path for herself, not one that was prescribed to her by any beliefs, morals or institutions.

The process after Dalia’s coming out has some characteristics that fit Foucault’s notion of sexuality. In our modern day society, talking about your sexual orientation as openly as Dalia has, is an increasingly popular phenomenon. Some taboo has been broken surrounding sexual orientation and we have more knowledge about it - scienta sexualis as Foucault described. Dalia is a very active advocate for the LGBTQ+ community and enforces this phenomenon by sharing on regular basis, all there is to know about her sexuality. 

She is also very determined to help as many people as possible to express themselves in the way that they identify themselves (she describes this goal in a recent post of hers, shown above). By doing so, she helps shape another one of Foucault’s concepts, namely normalization. More specifically, the normalization of the discussion around sexuality and the normalization of the sharing of information (and therefore increase of power).

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Our own profiles

We also create online identities. The things we decide to share and like are also often carefully chosen. What is immediately obvious when we look at our own profiles on social media platforms is that we keep information quite ‘private’ in comparison to the cases discussed above. For instance, all of us have a private account on Instagram and Facebook which means the administrator of the account can decide who is allowed to see her content. In that way, we have at least some power over who gets the see the things we post, and therefore, diminish the feeling of a panoptic society. Despite being watched all the time, we feel we have fewer obligations to justify our actions and posts on social media because the people we allow access to our profiles are like-minded people.

When we look at the things we post online we see that there are certain things everyone shares. For example, graduation or getting your driver's license. We can link this to the concept of normalization. It is expected of us to share important achievements in life because everyone does this, it has become the norm for social media. As soon as you do not share this kind of information, and rebel against the system, people will think you failed your exams. This kind of behaviour leads to exclusion.

Moreover, we only tend to show the positive things online. We post pictures of our travels, parties and other fun events. This displays only one side of our personality, which we like the most and which we want others to see. This can be related to the concept of 'mauvaise foi'. The sharing of good things and trying to show ourselves in a certain way is holding onto the picture of who we want to be, while offline this is not always the case.


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Sartre and Foucault are still reliable

Behavioural theories formed long before the social media era are still applicable today. In the span of few decades, considering the technological advances, people have not changed a lot. We are still influenced by certain things in the society and our own lives, and these factors do appear on the modern day profiles. The components of identity construction described by Sartre and Foucault, such as 'souci de soi,' factualities, the panopticon etc. can be found not only in the examples we discussed but also in any random pool of social media accounts. 

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References

Donkers, N. (2015-2016). Notes on Philosophy about Free Will. Eindhoven, NL: Pleincollege Eckart.

Foucault, M. (2003). Abnormal, Lectures at the College de France, 1974-1975. London, UK: Verso.

Howells, C. (1988). Sartre: The Necessity of Freedom. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

Maly, I. (2018). Nieuw Rechts, Uitgeverij Epo. Translated by us.

Sartre, J. P. (2007) Existentialism is a humanism. New Haven, CO - USA: Yale University Press

Schutijser, D. (2009). Vrijheid bij Sartre en bij Foucault. Published in: Wijsgierig.

Wubbels, E. (2005). Is praten over seks vrijheid? Nemo, Kennislink.

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Bachelor Online Culture: Art, Media and Society student.

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