What is it about?

This paper offers an introduction to poststructuralist interpretivist research in information systems, through a poststructuralist theoretical reading of the phenomenon and experience of social networking websites, such as Facebook. This is undertaken through an exploration of how loyally a social networking profile can represent the essence of an individual, and whether Platonic notions of essence, and loyalty of copy, are disturbed by the nature of a social networking profile, in ways described by poststructuralist thinker Deleuze’s notions of the reversal of Platonism. In bringing a poststructuralist critique to such hugely successful and popular social information systems, the paper attempts to further open up the black box of the computer ‘user’, extend interpretive approaches to information systems research to embrace poststructuralism, and explore how notions of the Self might be reflected through engagement with information system (IS), and how an IS appreciation of the phenomenon of global social networking may benefit from embracing such a poststructuralist approach.

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Why is it important?

This paper theorises Web 2.0 from a poststructuralist perspective, opening up the possibilities in Information Systems, as a discipline, for a far more philosophical theorisation of the phenomenon of user-generated content websites

Perspectives

This was my first major publication in the philosophy of information systems

Dr David G Kreps
National University of Ireland

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This page is a summary of: My social networking profile: copy, resemblance, or simulacrum? A poststructuralist interpretation of social information systems, European Journal of Information Systems, November 2009, Nature,
DOI: 10.1057/ejis.2009.46.
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