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Trans-Jurisdictional "Publivate" Cyber Self-(Re)presentation: The Transformation of Compartmentalization in Iranian Social Life

[journal article]

Meraji Oskuie, Shalaleh
Meraji Oskouie, Sholeh

Abstract

Background: Space is a constructed concept: a cultural and ideological segmentation, and a translation of the sociopolitical structures of society. On social media platforms, the public becomes a composite of privates, where individuals’ multiple selves are (re)presented before a multiplicity of aud... view more

Background: Space is a constructed concept: a cultural and ideological segmentation, and a translation of the sociopolitical structures of society. On social media platforms, the public becomes a composite of privates, where individuals’ multiple selves are (re)presented before a multiplicity of audiences within a third type of space, which we coin the "publivate" sphere. This sphere emerges from the combination and blurring of public and private spaces on social media platforms. Aims: This article aimed to shed light on issues related to cyber self-(re)presentation within this "publivate" space. Methodology: We utilized cross-level integration, synthesizing micro- and macro-level theories, and interdisciplinary integration, incorporating concepts and theories from diverse fields, including social media studies, sociology, psychology, and regulatory perspectives. Discussions: We discussed how the interplay among public, private, and "publivate" selves, along with the reciprocal influences of conformity, pluralistic ignorance, normalization, and normativity, have been transforming the traditional compartmentalization of spaces in Iranian social life. Additionally, we discussed the complications of trans-jurisdictional regulation of cyberspace and their implications for users, particularly Iranians. Conclusions: Given the dynamic nature of societies, norms, and cultures, effective governance of cyberspace and cultural practices should account for sociocultural dynamics.... view less

Keywords
Iran; Internet; self-presentation; normalization; social isolation; social media; the public; privacy; normativity

Classification
Interactive, electronic Media
Social Psychology

Free Keywords
cyber self-(re)presentation; pluralistic ignorance; public/private compartmentalization; "Publivate" space; trans-jurisdictional regulation

Document language
English

Publication Year
2025

Page/Pages
p. 25-45

Journal
Journal of Cyberspace Studies, 9 (2025) 1

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22059/jcss.2024.386246.1118

ISSN
2588-5502

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.