Introducing Identity - Summary

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Introducing Identity – David Buckingham

Introduction

On the one hand, identity is something unique to each of us that we assume is more
or less consistent (and hence the same) over time.

Yet on the other hand, identity also implies a relationship with a broader collective or
social group of some kind. When we talk about national identity, cultural identity, or
gender identity, for example, we imply that our identity is partly a matter of what we
share with other people.

Bauman emphasizes the fluidity of identity, seeing it as almost infinitely negotiable,


and in the process perhaps underestimates the continuing importance of routine and
stability. Nevertheless, his general point is well taken: “identity” only becomes an
issue when it is threatened or contested in some way and needs to be explicitly
asserted.

Psychological Approaches

G. Stanley Hall is often credited with introducing the popular notion of adolescence
as a period of “storm and stress,” characterized by intergenerational conflicts, mood
swings and an enthusiasm for risky behavior. From this perspective, the discussion
of adolescence often leads inexorably to the discussion of drugs, delinquency,
depression, and sexual deviance.

Erikson therefore sees adolescence as a critical period of identity formation, in which


individuals overcome uncertainty, become more self-aware of their strengths and
weaknesses, and become more confident in their own unique qualities. In order to
move on, adolescents must undergo a “crisis” in which they address key questions
about their values and ideals, their future occupation or career, and their sexual
identity.

Identity is developed by the individual, but it has to be recognized and confirmed by


others. Adolescence is thus also a period in which young people negotiate their
separation from their family, and develop independent social competence (for
example, through participation in “cliques” and larger “crowds” of peers, who exert
different types of influence).

Susannah Stern’s discussion of young people’s online authorship of blogs and home
pages suggests that this activity can provide important opportunities for self-
reflection and self-realization, and for expressing some of the conflicts and crises
that characterize this period.

In a different vein, Danah Boyd’s chapter also implies that social networking sites
like MySpace provide opportunities for social interaction and affiliation that are
crucial developmental tasks for this age group—opportunities that are all the more
important now, as their access to “offline” public spaces has become increasingly
restricted.

Sociological approaches
Mainstream sociologists have also been particularly concerned with issues of
youthful deviance and delinquency, in ways that often entail a pathological view of
young people. Youth—particularly youth in marginalized or subordinated social
groups—are frequently constructed as a “social problem” or “at risk.” This then
serves to legitimate various forms of treatment—the work of social, educational, and
clinical agencies that seeks to discipline or rehabilitate troublesome youth, or to
define and correct their apparent deficiencies. Nevertheless, sociologists generally
understand these phenomena in terms of social factors such as poverty and
inequality rather than as a matter of “raging hormones”: their interest is not so much
in internal personality conflicts, but more in the social uncertainties that young
people face, for example as they make the transition from the parental home to the
labor market.

Yet, on the other hand, we also need to consider how these media provide
young people with symbolic resources for constructing or expressing their own
identities, and, in some instances, for evading or directly resisting adult authority.

Social identity – the individual and the group

These processes operate at both social and individual levels: individuals may make
claims about their identity (for example, by asserting affiliation with other members of
a group), but those claims need to be recognized by others.

In seeking to define their identity, people attempt to assert their individuality, but also
to join with others, and they work to sustain their sense of status or self-esteem in
doing so.

Richard Jenkins argues that social identity should be seen not so much as a fixed
possession, but as a social process, in which the individual and the social are
inextricably related. Individual selfhood is a social phenomenon, but the social world
is constituted through the actions of individuals. As such, identity is a fluid,
contingent matter—it is something we accomplish practically through our ongoing
interactions and negotiations with other people.

One classic example of this approach is Erving Goffman’s The Presentation of Self
in EverydayLife, first published in the late 1950s. Goffman provides what he calls a
“dramaturgical” account of social interaction as a kind of theatrical performance.
Individuals seek to create impressions on others that will enable them to achieve
their goals (“impression management”), and they may join or collude with others to
create collaborative performances in doing so. Goffman distinguishes here between
“front-stage” and “back-stage” behavior. When “on stage,” for example in a
workplace or in a social gathering, individuals tend to conform to standardized
definitions of the situation and of their individual role within it, playing out a kind of
ritual. Back stage, they have the opportunity to be more honest: the impressions
created while on stage may be directly contradicted, and the team of performers
may disagree with each other.

The issue of performance is also very relevant to the ways in which young people
construct identities, for example, via the use of avatars, e-mail signatures, IM
nicknames, and (in a more elaborate way) in personal homepages and blogs. The
question of whether online identities are more or less honest or truthful than offline
ones has of course been a recurrent concern in studies of computer-mediated
communication.

Judith Butler – identity is a performance. Identity is something we do rather than


something that we are.

For example, on the one hand, it could be argued that the Internet provides
significant opportunities for exploring facets of identity that might previously have
been denied or stigmatized, or indeed simply for the sharing of information on such
matters. Such arguments presume that media can be used as a means of
expressing or even discovering aspects of one’s “true self,” for example, in relation
to sexuality. Yet on the other hand, these media can also be seen to provide
powerful opportunities for identity play, for parody and subversion of the kind
promoted by queer theory. Here, the emphasis would lie not on honesty and truth,
but on the potential for performance and even for deception.

Anthony Giddens is probably the best-known exponent of a broader argument about


the changing nature of identity in what he terms “late modern” societies. Giddens
argues that many of the beliefs and customary practices that used to define
identities in traditional societies (such as those of organized religion) are now less
and less influential. In this “posttraditional” society, people have to make a whole
range of choices, not just about aspects such as appearance and lifestyle, but more
broadly about their life destinations and relationships. They are offered a plethora of
guidance on such matters by experts of various kinds and by the popular media (for
example, in the form of lifestyle news, makeover shows, and self-help books),
although ultimately the individuals are required to make these choices on
their own behalf.

As a result, Giddens suggests, modern individuals have to be constantly “self-


reflexive,” making decisions about what they should do and who they should be. The
self becomes a kind of “project” that individuals have to work on: they have to create
biographical “narratives” that will explain themselves to themselves, and hence
sustain a coherent and consistent identity. Like many of the other authors I have
discussed, Giddens sees identity as fluid and malleable, rather than fixed. He
recognizes that this new freedom places new burdens and responsibilities on
people; particularly in a world of increasing risk and insecurity, the individual is
placed under greater emotional stress. Yet in general, he regards this as a positive
development and as part of a broader process of democratization; modern
consumer culture has offered individuals multiple possibilities to construct and
fashion their own identities, and they are now able to do this in increasingly creative
and diverse ways.

Some of the difficulties here become apparent when we contrast Giddens’s


approach with that of Michel Foucault and some of his followers. What Giddens
appears to regard as a form of liberation (or at least self-actualization) is seen by
Foucault as simply another means of exercising disciplinary power. Foucault argues
that who we are—or who we perceive ourselves to be—is far from a matter of
individual choice; on the contrary, it is the product of powerful and subtle forms
of “governmentality” that are characteristic of modern liberal democracies. Foucault
asserts that there has been a shift in the ways in which power is exercised in the
modern world, which is apparent in a whole range of social domains. Rather than
being held (and indeed displayed) by sovereign authorities, power is now diffused
through social relationships; rather than being regulated by external agencies (the
government or the church), individuals are now encouraged to regulate themselves
and to ensure that their own behavior falls within acceptable norms. What Giddens
describes as self-reflexivity is seen by Foucault in much more sinister terms, as a
process of self-monitoring and self-surveillance. Giddens’ “project of the self” is
recast here as a matter of individuals policing themselves, and the forms of self-help
and therapy that Giddens seems to regard in quite positive terms are redefined as
modern forms of confession, in which individuals are constantly required to account
for themselves and “speak the truth” about their identities.

For example, Marc Prensky makes a distinction between digital “natives” (who have
grown up with this technology) and digital “immigrants” (adults who have come to it
later in life) that has been widely influential in popular debate.41 Prensky argues that
digital natives have a very different style of learning: they crave interactivity, they
value graphics before words; they want random access, and they operate at the
“twitch speed” of video games and MTV. As a result, they are dissatisfied with old
styles of instruction, based on exposition and step-by- step logic: they see digital
immigrants as speaking in an entirely alien, outdated language. Prensky even
suggests that digital natives have a very different brain structure from that of
immigrants, as though technology had precipitated a form of physical evolution
within a period of little more than a decade.

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