Résumés
Abstract
This article examines contemporary artists’ appropriation of social media platforms to explore new narrative forms. In addition to the aesthetic and thematic qualities of these works, artists’ social media narratives reveal pragmatic and discursive qualities, notably unique space-time configurations. Artists such as Molly Soda, Amalia Ulman, Martine Gutierrez, or even the design team Brud’s Instagram CGI character Lil Miquela, highlight the temporal and spatial narrative dimensions of social media designs and the ways these platforms facilitate, guide, and frame self-representation and storytelling. This article will explore the ways in which narrative elements are both integrated into the design of social media platforms and reappropriated artistically for critical or reflexive use, (re)constructing the intentions and potentials of both the technology and the narrative concepts. This reflection draws on literary discourse theory as well as digital narratology and socio-linguistics, specifically employing French philosopher Paul Ricœur’s concept of narrative identity and emplotment as well as Russian structuralist Mikhail Bakhtin’s theory of chronotope (Greek for “time-space”). Through this analysis, we interpret artistic social media practices as self-narratives that employ medium-specific temporal configurations and challenge the traditional narrative framework.
Keywords:
- Literary speech,
- Hypertext,
- Gender,
- Identity,
- Media,
- Narrative,
- Reflexive,
- Selfie,
- Social media,
- Artistic and literary depictions of body and space,
- Bakhtin
Résumé
Cet article examine l’appropriation des plateformes de réseaux sociaux par les artistes contemporains pour explorer de nouvelles pratiques narratives. Outre les qualités esthétiques et thématiques de ces œuvres, les récits des artistes sur les réseaux sociaux révèlent des qualités pragmatiques et discursives, notamment des configurations spatio-temporelles uniques. Des artistes comme Molly Soda, Amalia Ulman, Martine Gutierrez, ou même le personnage 3D Lil Miquela de l’agence de design Brud sur Instagram, mettent en lumière les dimensions spatiotemporelles du design des réseaux sociaux. Elles révèlent la manière dont ces plateformes facilitent, guident et encadrent la représentation de soi et le récit. Cet article explore les manières dont des éléments narratifs sont à la fois intégrés dans la conception des plateformes de réseaux sociaux et réappropriés artistiquement pour un usage critique ou réflexif, (re)construisant les intentions et les potentiels à la fois de ces technologies et des concepts narratifs. Cette réflexion s’appuie sur la théorie du discours littéraire ainsi que sur la narratologie numérique et la sociolinguistique, en mobilisant spécifiquement trois concepts ; ceux d’identité narrative et de mise-en-intrigue du philosophe français Paul Ricœur ainsi que la théorie du chronotope (« espace-temps » en grec) du structuraliste russe Mikhail Bakhtin. Par cette analyse, nous interprétons les pratiques artistiques sur les réseaux sociaux comme des récits de soi qui emploient des configurations temporelles spécifiques au médium et remettent en question le cadre narratif traditionnel.
Mots-clés :
- Discours littéraire,
- Hypertexte,
- Genre,
- Identité,
- Médias,
- Récit,
- Réflexivité,
- Selfie,
- Représentations artistiques et littéraires du corps et de l’espace,
- Réseaux sociaux,
- Bakhtine
Parties annexes
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