In todays digital era, social media functions as a central battlefield where cultural expression, activism, and public memory converge to shape collective identity. This paper examines the multifaceted role of social platforms in the reinforcement, negotiation, and transformation of shared group identities. Through case studies such as Selena Quintanillas legacy in the Latino community, the Black Lives Matter movement, and Iranian womens rights activism, the analysis explains how social media fosters solidarity and preserves cultural heritage, particularly among marginalized social groups. Beyond reinforcement, digital platforms transform traditional memory archives from static monuments or museums into online participatory spaces where individuals actively and collectively reinterpret and negotiate cultural narratives and thus, democratizing public memory. At the same time, the algorithmic design of social media contributes to fragmentation, misinformation, and distorted nostalgia of identity, creating both cohesion and polarization. By analyzing these features, this study highlights social medias significant duality: it enables communities to amplify their voices and redefine their cultural heritage, while also risking misrepresentation and fragmented memories. Ultimately, understanding this conflict is crucial for balancing the opportunities and challenges of the formation of digital identity in an interconnected world.
Ziqiu Wang (Tue,) studied this question.