Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/132611
Title: Defining collective identities in technopolitical interaction networks
Author: Barandiaran, Xabier  
Calleja-Lopez, Antonio  
Cozzo, Emanuele
Others: Universitat Oberta de Catalunya. Internet Interdisciplinary Institute (IN3)
Citation: Barandiaran, X. [Xabier], Calleja-López, A. [Antonio] & Cozzo, E. [Emanuele] (2020). Defining Collective Identities in Technopolitical Interaction Networks. Frontiers in Psychology, 11, 1-22. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01549
Abstract: We are currently witnessing the emergence of new forms of collective identities and a redefinition of the old ones through networked digital interactions, and these can be explicitly measured and analyzed. We distinguish between three major trends on the development of the concept of identity in the social realm: (1) an essentialist sense (based on conditions and properties shared by members of a group), (2) a representational or ideational sense (based on the application of categories by oneself or others), and (3) a relational and interactional sense (based on interaction processes between actors and their environments). The interactional approach aligns with current empirical and methodological progress in social network analysis. Moreover, it has been argued that, within the network society, the notion of collective identity (Melucci, 1995) in the political field must be rethought as technologically mediated and interactive. We suggest that collective identities should be understood as recurrent, cohesive, and coordinated communicative interaction networks. We here propose that such identities can be depicted by: (a) mapping and filtering a relevant interaction network, (b) delimiting a set of communities, (c) determining the strongly connected component(s) of such communities (the core identity) in a directed graph, and (d) defining the identity audiences and sources within the community. This technical graph-theoretical characterization is explained and justified in detail through a toy model and applied to three empirical case studies to characterize political identities in party politics (communicative interaction in Twitter during the Spanish elections in 2018), contentious politics in confrontation (in Twitter during the Catalan strike for independence 2019), and the multitudinous identity of Spanish Indignados/15 social movement (in Facebook fan pages 2011). We discuss how the proposed definition is useful to delimit and characterize the internal structure of collective identities in technopolitical interaction networks, and we suggest how the proposed methods can be improved and complemented with other approaches. We finally draw the theoretical implications of understanding collective identities as emerging from interaction networks in a progressive platformization of social interactions in a digital world.
Keywords: collective identity
social identity
social interaction
digital networks
social network analysis
technopolitics
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01549
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Issue Date: Jul-2020
Publication license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/  
Appears in Collections:Articles
Articles cientÍfics

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Defining Collective Identities inTechnopolitical Interaction Networks.pdf7,21 MBAdobe PDFThumbnail
View/Open