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Autor principal: Spiridonov, Darya
Formato: Recurso digital
Lenguaje:inglés
Publicado: Zenodo 2026
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Acceso en línea:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18496647
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author Spiridonov, Darya
author_facet Spiridonov, Darya
contents <p>This article proposes to consider written discourse not as a form of self-expression, but as an epistemological instrument for the recognition of personality within digital culture. In contrast to visual forms of self-presentation (photography, video) and manipulative journalistic texts, writing fixes a prolonged trajectory of thought and minimizes the possibilities of simulation. Particular attention is given to the role of error, logical sequence, repetition, and return as diagnostic indicators of autonomous thinking. The analysis draws on classical observations concerning mass influence and slow reading, as well as on historical examples of diaries, correspondence, and non-addressed written traces as forms that enable the recognition of personality outside the regime of public presence.</p>
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publisher Zenodo
record_format zenodo
spellingShingle Written Discourse and the Recognition of Personality: Visual Self-Presentation, Manipulation, and the Epistemology of Slow Reading
Spiridonov, Darya
Sociology
<p>This article proposes to consider written discourse not as a form of self-expression, but as an epistemological instrument for the recognition of personality within digital culture. In contrast to visual forms of self-presentation (photography, video) and manipulative journalistic texts, writing fixes a prolonged trajectory of thought and minimizes the possibilities of simulation. Particular attention is given to the role of error, logical sequence, repetition, and return as diagnostic indicators of autonomous thinking. The analysis draws on classical observations concerning mass influence and slow reading, as well as on historical examples of diaries, correspondence, and non-addressed written traces as forms that enable the recognition of personality outside the regime of public presence.</p>
title Written Discourse and the Recognition of Personality: Visual Self-Presentation, Manipulation, and the Epistemology of Slow Reading
topic Sociology
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18496647