The IMACTIS project contributes to a better understanding of social networks, of the mechanisms of value construction within these virtual environments, as well as to the development of a more critical use of the language of images by all social actors (professionals, institutions, citizens). These results could be exploited in policy-making activities, particularly with regard to identity narrations that are developed by politicians and other social actors. Thanks to the repertoire of critical strategies developed during the project, alternative and positive forms of social narration could be developed by exploiting the formal repertoire in order to promote positive and progressive issues in the fields of the environment, heritage, and gender equality.
The following advances over the state of the art were obtained:
1) a new epistemology of visual documents articulated into a compositional dimension (the figures, shapes, colors, and dialogical configurations: everything that is internal to the images), a mediatic dimension (the materials, technical formats, resolution, production devices), and a rhetorical dimension (the genres and the rhetorical acts performed within, through, and upon the images).
2) a theory capable of accounting for the construction, management and transformation of values on social networks. Social networks have been reconceived as distinctive semio-rhetorical spaces based on an unprecedented attention and gift economy in which there is a paradoxical experiential and algorithmic regression in the management of social interactions. In particular, the project approached the way in which quantitative appreciation is systematically transformed into reputational, monetary, and aesthetic values.
3) an original reinterpretation of Paul Ricœur’s theory of identity aimed at understanding identity narrations realized through the images of social networks. Identity is the result of the articulation between two polarities into an identity narration: on the one hand, the character, the habits, the physical appearance; on the other, the ethical values, the figures chosen as heroes, the innovative behaviors.
4) an analysis of the new genres of identity-related images on social media, such as selfies, face reveals, reaction videos, live streaming. These new genres of images are transforming the presence of actors in the public sphere and are impacting all social domains (art, politics, entertainment, fashion).
5) the integration of the theory of identity with the hypothesis of a dramaturgy of the face that draws upon the tradition of studies on artistic portraiture, and the transformation of the film actor into a fictional character.
6) the construction of a repertoire of strategies in order to build identity narrations through the expressive resources of images.