Visibility and Influence in Digital Social Relations: Towards a New Symbolic Capital?

Authors

  • ANNAKI Fouad
  • OUASSOU Sara
  • IGAMANE Saâdeddine

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15364096

Keywords:

Digital Social Relations, Visibility, Influence, Symbolic Capital, Social Capital, Network Theory, Online Reputation

Abstract

Abstract

This study explores the dynamics of visibility and influence in digital social relations, examining their implications for the emergence of a new symbolic capital. Using a mixed-methods design, the research combined semi-structured interviews with 20 digitally active individuals and quantitative social media data analysis to identify key predictors of digital symbolic capital. Findings reveal that visibility is influenced by content quality, network size, and engagement strategies, while influence depends on credibility, authority, and trust. The study identifies a new form of symbolic capital based on online visibility, influence, and reputation, distinct from traditional forms. The research discusses the ethical implications of these dynamics and suggests future research directions, emphasizing the need to update social theories to account for digital transformations.

Keywords

Digital Social Relations, Visibility, Influence, Symbolic Capital, Social Capital, Network Theory, Online Reputation

Author Biographies

ANNAKI Fouad

(Ph.D. in Economic Sociology, ORCID )
Department of Sociology, Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences – Dhar El Mahraz Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University, Fez, Morocco

OUASSOU Sara

(MC, ORCID )
Faculty of Legal, Economic and Social Sciences, Mohammed First University, Oujda, Morocco

IGAMANE Saâdeddine

(MCA, ORCID )
Department of Sociology, Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences – Dhar El Mahraz, Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University, Fez, Morocco

Published

2025-05-08

How to Cite

ANNAKI Fouad, OUASSOU Sara, & IGAMANE Saâdeddine. (2025). Visibility and Influence in Digital Social Relations: Towards a New Symbolic Capital?. African Scientific Journal, 3(29), 796. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15364096

Issue

Section

Articles