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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Comput. Sci.

Sec. Human-Media Interaction

This article is part of the Research TopicFrom Memes to Movements: How Affordances Shape Resistance and Collective Action on TikTokView all articles

Amplified Selves, Elusive Collectives: The Paradox of Digital Nomadism on TikTok

Provisionally accepted
  • Centre for Research in Applied Communication, Culture and New Technologies, Lusophone University, Lisboa, Portugal

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

This study examines the construction of collective identity among digital nomads on TikTok, foregrounding how psychological needs from Maslow's hierarchy are selectively projected through the platform's affordances. The study deployed a mixed-method, longitudinal analysis of over 10,000 TikTok posts tagged with #digitalnomad from 2020 to early 2025. Findings show that TikTok's design prioritizes content optimizing for individual, aspirational self-presentation, and peer resonance. As a consequence, digital nomad collective identity on the platform centers on entrepreneurialism and lifestyle optimization, increasingly favouring narratives of individual affordability, adaptability, and micro-achievement. TikTok's algorithmic and memetic infrastructure systematically amplifies digital nomads' content that addresses personal recognition and community engagement (social needs), shaped to be episodic, marketable, and non-threatening to existing labor structures, sidelining narratives of collective struggle and systemic challenge. This dynamic effectively produces a culture of celebrated resilience and individualized aspiration, creating a visible collective identity without the collective grievances or solidarities that underpin social mobilization. In our corpus, complex issues, such as legal rights or labor precarity, are marginalized by platform logics that favor memetic, digestible content, thereby inhibiting the formation of politically coherent movements. Ultimately, this research demonstrates that TikTok's sociotechnical architecture channels the energies of digital nomads toward visible and episodic social and safety needs fulfillment, yet undermines the conditions for sustained collective mobilization. The platform transforms personal travelogues into aspirational mobility templates, mediating the tension between aspiration and precarity while highlighting a paradox: its capacity to build shared identity simultaneously constrains the potential for collective action.

Keywords: Digital nomadism, platform affordances, TikTok, Maslow's hierarchy, collective action

Received: 03 Oct 2025; Accepted: 26 Nov 2025.

Copyright: © 2025 Ehn. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence: Karine Ehn

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