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Prosumer-citizenship and the local: A critical case study of consumer reviewing on Yelp.com.

机译:消费者公民和当地居民:Yelp.com上消费者评论的关键案例研究。

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摘要

Over the past few years, content developers searching for new markets have found a potentially lucrative consumer base in local and location-based services as new media platforms have begun to "expand" their focus to hyper-local place-based communities. This shift to "local 2.0" has given birth to "local listing sites," an emerging social medium that converges the content of traditional Yellow Pages, consumer-generated content and the interactive features of social network sites. Such sites harness the productive power of "prosumers," the hybrid subjectivity of new media users who simultaneously produce and consume online content (Tapscott & Williams, 2006). These sites capitalize on the productivity of users who create discourses through and about local consumption by voluntarily rating and reviewing local businesses and services, challenging the power of institutions traditionally responsible for the production of consumer culture and reputation management (e.g., local business owners, marketers, advertisers, professional critics).;Theoretical perspectives on the power of prosumption vary across academic scholarship; on the one end of this debate are techno-utopians who believe prosumption empowers consumers whose choices have been long constrained by a top-down corporate culture and marketing industry (e.g., Bruns, 2008; Jenkins, 2007). On the other end, critical scholars position consumer-generated content as a form of free labor and thus tend to view prosumption as an inherently exploitative practice (e.g., Andrejevic, 2007; Cohen, 2008; van Dijck, 2009). Yet while the theoretical positions on prosumption are divisive, empirical research on these debates is comparatively limited -- particularly as it pertains to how prosumers negotiate their role as content producers in the digital economy.;This dissertation aims to fill the lack of empirical prosumption research with an investigation of the practice of consumer-reviewing as a form of prosumption on the local listing site Yelp.com -- a social networking site and local listing guide that allows consumers to rate and review local businesses and services in their community. This project aims to understand how consumers-as-media-producers experience and make sense of their productive activity through this emerging social media format, as well as the mediating role that localism plays in this process. Yelp offers up a unique opportunity to not only appropriate prosumption as a form of consumer-citizenship but to reconnect people through a local, place-based identification through social and political action. Thus, this research also explores how prosumption in the "virtual" impacts offline behaviors in the "real.";This project is a study in three parts; the first section begins with a critical discourse analysis of Yelp's promotional campaign and site architecture that investigates how the site rhetorically and structurally enables and delimits prosumer agency and power. The second section offers a textual analysis of consumer reviews in order to demonstrate how Yelp structures participation to primarily articulate prosumers as customers over [local] citizens; the third part analyzes interviews conducted with active Yelpers and argues that consumer reviewing, as a form of prosumption, is a complex and conflicting practice. While consumer reviewing is not inherently empowering or exploitative, its potential to serve as a form of consumer-citizenship is decidedly limited. Interviews reveal that although Yelpers negotiate and contest the discursive constraints placed on prosumption by the site's architectures of participation, these same users also rationalize and identify with the site's exploitative tendencies. As such, Yelp is ultimately treated as "not the place" for articulating the politics of consumption which suggest limitations in the transformative capabilities of this prosumption practice. While counter-discourses are at times employed, Yelpers ultimately work to reproduce hegemonic discourses of consumption.
机译:在过去的几年中,随着新的媒体平台开始将其关注点“扩展”到超本地的地方社区,寻找新市场的内容开发人员已经在本地和基于位置的服务中找到了潜在的有利可图的消费者基础。这种向“本地2.0”的转变催生了“本地列表网站”,这是一种新兴的社交媒体,融合了传统黄页的内容,消费者生成的内容以及社交网站的交互功能。这些站点利用“生产者”的生产能力,即同时生产和消费在线内容的新媒体用户的混合主观性(Tapscott&Williams,2006)。这些站点通过自愿评估和审查本地企业和服务来利用通过本地消费进行讨论的用户的生产力,从而挑战了传统上负责生产消费者文化和声誉管理的机构的力量(例如,本地企业所有者,营销商,广告客户,专业评论家)。;关于推销权力的理论观点因学术奖学金而异;在这场辩论的一端,是技术乌托邦主义者,他们认为消费促进了长期以来一直受自上而下的企业文化和营销行业限制的消费者的选择权(例如,Bruns,2008年; Jenkins,2007年)。另一方面,批判学者将消费者产生的内容定位为一种自由劳动,因此倾向于将消费视为一种固有的剥削行为(例如,Andrejevic,2007; Cohen,2008; van Dijck,2009)。然而,尽管关于消费的理论立场是分歧的,但对这些辩论的实证研究相对有限-尤其是涉及到消费者如何协商其在数字经济中作为内容生产者的角色时;本论文旨在弥补实证性消费研究的不足在本地上市网站Yelp.com上调查了以消费者为主导的消费行为,这是一个社交网站和本地上市指南,允许消费者对社区中的本地企业和服务进行评级和审查。该项目旨在通过这种新兴的社交媒体格式,了解作为媒体生产者的消费者是如何体验和理解其生产活动的,以及本地化在此过程中所起的中介作用。 Yelp提供了一个独特的机会,不仅可以将适当的消费作为一种公民消费形式,而且可以通过社会和政治行动通过基于地点的本地身份重新建立人们的联系。因此,本研究还探讨了“虚拟”中的消费对“真实”中的离线行为有何影响。第一部分从对Yelp的促销活动和网站架构的批判性话语分析开始,该网站调查了网站如何在言辞和结构上实现和限制生产者的代理机构和权力。第二部分提供了对消费者评论的文字分析,以说明Yelp如何构建参与度,以便主要阐明作为[本地]公民的顾客的生产者。第三部分分析了对活跃的Yelpers进行的采访,并认为,作为一种消费形式的消费者评论是一种复杂且矛盾的做法。虽然消费者评论并不是天生的授权或剥削,但其作为消费者公民身份形式的潜力却受到了限制。访谈显示,尽管Yelpers会就站点参与架构对推销的话语约束进行协商和争论,但这些相同的用户也会合理化并确定站点的剥削倾向。因此,Yelp最终被视为表达消费政治的“地方”,这暗示了这种消费实践的变革能力受到限制。尽管有时会使用反话语,但Yelpers最终致力于复制消费的霸权话语。

著录项

  • 作者

    Kuehn, Kathleen M.;

  • 作者单位

    The Pennsylvania State University.;

  • 授予单位 The Pennsylvania State University.;
  • 学科 Web Studies.;Mass Communications.;Information Science.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2011
  • 页码 312 p.
  • 总页数 312
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:45:01

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