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Persona Studies: An Introduction [Pehme köide]

(Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia), (University of Adelaide, Australia), (University of Wollongong, Australia)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 272 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x150x18 mm, kaal: 431 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-May-2019
  • Kirjastus: Wiley-Blackwell
  • ISBN-10: 1118935055
  • ISBN-13: 9781118935057
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 272 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x150x18 mm, kaal: 431 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-May-2019
  • Kirjastus: Wiley-Blackwell
  • ISBN-10: 1118935055
  • ISBN-13: 9781118935057
Teised raamatud teemal:
Modern social media and communication technologies have reshaped our identities and transformed contemporary culture, revealing an expanded and intensified reforming of our collective online behavior. Billions of people worldwide are increasingly engaged in the production, presentation, and modification of their public selves -curating personas through various social media and fundamentally altering how we interact in the twenty-first century. The study of persona is essential to understanding contemporary culture, yet literature in this emerging field is scarce. Filling a gap in current knowledge, Persona Studies: An Introduction is the first major work to examine the construction, delivery, and curation of public personas in contemporary online culture.

This timely book helps readers navigate the changing cultural landscape while laying the groundwork for further research and application of persona studies. Three case studies are included-examining personas of the artist, gamer, and professional-to illustrate how personas continue to transform identity and reshape contemporary culture. From the historical precursors of the current iteration of persona to emerging configurations of public self, this unique work offers readers a broad introduction to the evolving I theories and concepts of how persona defines the contemporary condition and its relation to technology and collective identity. This important new text

Analyzes how identities linked to data are cultivated, curated, and mined for various purposes

Discusses the mediated blending of media and different types of interpersonal communication

Explores tools for the investigation and analysis of persona, including prosopographic field studies and information visualization

Translates new research, concepts, theories, methods, and approaches into clear case studies and applications

Examines the personalization of public, private, and intimate information in the building of new personas

The definitive and first major text on personas in contemporary culture

Modern social media and communication technologies have reshaped our identities and transformed contemporary culture, revealing an expanded and intensified reforming of our collective online behavior. Billions of people worldwide are increasingly engaged in the production, presentation, and modification of their public selves—curating personas through various social media and fundamentally altering how we interact in the twenty-first century. The study of persona is essential to understanding contemporary culture, yet literature in this emerging field is scarce. Filling a gap in current knowledge, Persona Studies: An Introduction is the first major work to examine the construction, delivery, and curation of public identities in contemporary online culture. 

This timely book helps readers navigate the changing cultural landscape while laying the groundwork for further research and application of persona studies. Three case studies are included—examining personas of the artist, gamer, and professional­—to illustrate how personas continue to transform identity and reshape contemporary culture. From the historical precursors of the current iteration of persona to emerging configurations of public self, this unique work offers readers a broad introduction to the evolving theories and concepts of how persona defines the contemporary condition and its relation to technology and collective identity. To summarize, the book:

  • Analyzes how identities linked to data are cultivated, curated and mined for various purposes
  • Discusses the mediated blending of media and different types of interpersonal communication
  • Explores tools for the investigation and analysis of persona, including Prosopographic field studies and information visualization
  • Translates new research, concept, theories, methods, and approaches into clear case studies and applications
  • Examines the personalization of public, private, and intimate information in the building of new personas

Persona Studies: An Introduction is an innovative resource for students, academics, researchers, and professionals in fields covering digital and social media, technology and culture, mass media and communications, social and media psychology and sociology, and professional studies.

About the Authors ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: A short history of the new public self 1(12)
References 13(2)
Part I Conceptualising Persona 15(96)
1 Persona and Its Uses
17(22)
Persona Studies and the Public Self
18(2)
From Personae to Persona
20(4)
The Premodern to the Contemporary Self
24(2)
Applying Persona
26(1)
Persona in Psychology
27(1)
Persona in Literature
28(1)
Persona in Performing Arts
29(1)
Persona as Performance
30(2)
Persona Through Personalization
32(3)
References
35(4)
2 The Contemporary Significance of Persona
39(20)
Introduction
39(1)
Intercommunication: The Human-Machine Interface
39(3)
Celebrity and Surveillance
42(5)
Intercommunication
47(5)
Intercommunication and Affect Theory
52(2)
Conclusion
54(1)
References
55(4)
3 Intercommunication and the Dimensions and Registers of Persona
59(28)
Introduction
59(1)
Persona as Individualized
60(1)
Persona as Interpersonal
61(1)
Persona as Indexical
62(1)
Persona as Internetworked
63(2)
Registers of Performance
65(2)
Professional
65(1)
Personal
66(1)
Intimate
66(1)
Five Dimensions of Persona
67(12)
Public Dimension of Persona
68(1)
Mediatized Dimension of Persona
69(1)
Performative Dimension of Persona
69(2)
Collective Dimension of Persona
71(1)
The Fifth Dimension of Persona: Value, Agency, Reputation, Prestige (VARP)
72(93)
Value
74(1)
Agency
75(2)
Reputation
77(1)
Prestige
78(1)
Conclusion
79(1)
References
80(7)
4 The Collective Constitution of Public Persona
87(24)
Micro-publics
87(3)
Microcelebrity
90(1)
Surveillance Capitalism and Persuasive Technologies
91(3)
Persona as Digital Objects
94(2)
Digital Objects, Micro-publics, and Hyperobjects
96(3)
Digital Object and Autosurveillance
99(6)
Conclusion
105(1)
References
106(5)
Part II Researching Persona 111(94)
5 Analyzing Contemporary Persona: Methods to Reveal the Public Version of the Self
113(20)
Researching Ourselves: Reflexivity, Autoethnography, and First-person Action Research
114(1)
Interpreting the Public Self: Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis
115(4)
Personas in the Making: Second-person Action Research
119(4)
Reputation and Inter-related Persona: Prosopographic Field Study
123(3)
Networked Selves: Information Visualization and Exploration
126(2)
Conclusion
128(1)
References
129(4)
6 The Artist's Persona
133(22)
The Artist as Subject
134(1)
The Artist Myth
135(1)
Romanticism and the Arts
136(1)
Self-presentation in the Myth of the Artist
136(1)
Artist's Typologies
137(4)
Authors, Auteurs, and Makers
141(3)
The Artist as Creative Laborer
144(1)
Online Artistness
145(5)
Conclusion
150(1)
References
151(4)
7 From Player to Persona
155(24)
The Role of Avatars
157(2)
From Avatar to Persona
159(2)
The Rise and Fall of the Gamer
161(4)
Gameur: From Modder to Indie Game Developer Persona
165(9)
Public
167(2)
Mediatized
169(1)
Performative
170(1)
Collective
171(1)
Intentional Value (VARP)
172(2)
Conclusion
174(1)
References
175(4)
8 The Professional Persona
179(26)
Work, Public Identity, and the Concept of the Professional
179(22)
Step 1: Identify Online Culture's Destabilizing Effect on Professional Personas
183(2)
Step 2: The Instability of Past Value and the Push to New Value
185(4)
Step 3: Agency, Active Visibility, and the Professional Persona
189(8)
Step 4: The Online Transformation of Professional Reputation and Prestige
197(4)
Conclusion
201(1)
References
201(4)
Conclusion 205(16)
Glossary: Key Words in Persona Studies 221(24)
Index 245
P. David Marshall is Professor and Personal Research Chair in New Media, Communication and Cultural Studies, Deakin University, Australia.

Christopher Moore is Senior Lecturer in Digital Communication and Media, University of Wollongong, Australia.

Kim Barbour is Lecturer in Media, School of Humanities, Faculty of Arts, University of Adelaide, Australia.