Audiences in an Age of Datafication: Critical Questions for Media Research

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Livingstone, Sonia
In: Television & New Media, 20, 2019, 2, p. 170-183
published:
SAGE Publications
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
Physical Description: 170-183
ISSN: 1527-4764
1552-8316
DOI: 10.1177/1527476418811118
published in: Television & New Media
Language: English
Subjects:
Collection: SAGE Publications (CrossRef)
Table of Contents

<jats:p>This article critically examines how fears of audience gullibility, ignorance, and exploitation impede media studies’ response to the pressing challenges posed by the growing power of social media platforms and their innovative datafication practices. I revisit the history of audience research to show how empirical findings contested the pejorative conception of the audience problematically yet persistently imagined by theorists of media power during the twentieth century. As media studies joins other disciplines in responding to the growing datafication of society, I propose that the circuit of culture model can help theorize media (including platform and algorithmic) power by opening up the hermeneutic and action space between production and consumption. In this way, critical scholarship might more effectively analyze such metaprocesses as mediatization and datafication precisely by recognizing rather than erasing audiences’ relation to both the everyday lifeworld and the public world of citizen action, regulatory intervention, and the wider society.</jats:p>