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Smythe incorporates eight core categories of the Marxist [[Political economy|political economy]] of communications. These categories include materiality, [[Monopoly capitalism|monopoly capitalism]], audience [[Commodification|commodification]] in advertising, media communication as part of capitalism, [[Labour power|labour power]], [[Technological determinism|technological determinism]], [[Consciousness|consciousness]], arts, and learning. <ref name=fuchs/> |
Smythe incorporates eight core categories of the Marxist [[Political economy|political economy]] of communications. These categories include materiality, [[Monopoly capitalism|monopoly capitalism]], audience [[Commodification|commodification]] in advertising, media communication as part of capitalism, [[Labour power|labour power]], [[Technological determinism|technological determinism]], [[Consciousness|consciousness]], arts, and learning. <ref name=fuchs/> |
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Based on a [[Liberalism|Liberal]] outlook, Smythe and Marx's theories share relationships with [[Exchange value|exchange value]] of the audience/laborer, as well as capital markets and [[Class struggle|class struggle]] between capitalism and the audience/consumer. <ref name=fuchs/> |
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===Contemporary Ideas of the Audience Commodity=== |
===Contemporary Ideas of the Audience Commodity=== |
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=Arguments Against the Audience Commodity= |
=Arguments Against the Audience Commodity= |
Revision as of 00:59, 29 November 2016
Audience Commodity Theory
The theory of the audience commodity was first proposed by Dallas Walker Smythe, claiming that the principle product of the commercial mass media in monopoly capitalism was audience power. This audience power is used to accomplish the economic and political tasks which are the reason for the existence of the commercial mass media.[1]
Smythe argues that audience power is produced, sold, purchased and consumed, which ultimately defines it as a commodity as it is valuable to the mass media and boasts a price. Furthermore, like any other labor power, audience power involves work, which under capitalism is defined as an action for which one receives payment. The difference in this instance is that the payment the audience receives is not in the monetary form, but in entertainment form through the program that they consume by watching as an audience. [1]
Under this theory the audience works to create the demand for advertised goods which is the intention of capitalist advertisers; the advertisers expectations are achieved through these outcomes that gratify the demand management system. This degrades the audience into a submissive form of value for the mass media. [1]
Karl Marx | |
---|---|
Born | May 5, 1818 |
Died | March 14, 1883 |
Nationality | German, Stateless |
Occupation(s) | Philosopher, Economist, Sociologist, Journalist |
Notable work | Labor Theory of Value, Surplus Value, Alienation in Labor |
Relationship with Traditional Marxism
Smythe's approach to to communication studies and the audience as a commodity is considered to be a study of Karl Marx and Marxist , which merges theoretical, ethical, and empirical media/communication analysis. [2]
Smythe incorporates eight core categories of the Marxist political economy of communications. These categories include materiality, monopoly capitalism, audience commodification in advertising, media communication as part of capitalism, labour power, technological determinism, consciousness, arts, and learning. [2]
Based on a Liberal outlook, Smythe and Marx's theories share relationships with exchange value of the audience/laborer, as well as capital markets and class struggle between capitalism and the audience/consumer. [2]
Contemporary Ideas of the Audience Commodity
Arguments Against the Audience Commodity
There are many scholars and theorists that disagree with Smythe's arguments and theories regarding the audience as a submissive commodity.
One of the leading critics of Smythe's work, Brett Caraway, points out the limitations of Smythe's interpretations and argues that Smythe's theory represents a 'one-sided class analysis' which minimalizes working-class subjectivity; the surplus value generated by advertisers for the media owners disputes the notion that audiences are working for the advertisers. Capitalism does not directly control audience activities and the use value produced by the audience labor is not alienated from them. [3]
Caraway argues that these qualities are required under the Marxist mode of capitalist labor and are lacking within the audience commodity model, which means that the audience is not under the submissive control of capitalists in the form that the audience commodity places them under. [3]
Many other criticisms supporting Caraway argue based upon similar guidelines. Some suggest that network executives and advertisers discuss the buying and selling of audiences, which means that what is being sold is 'time', which prom this perspective the audience does not exist as a commodity because no one can 'own' them. Also, in terms of advertising, critics argue that television audiences are not obliged to watch; they are formally free not to watch at all. Furthering this, critics state that, as individuals, we don't feel commodification as we consume media as an audience, and therefore we are not acting towards its production.[4][5][6]
References
- ^ a b c Smythe, Dallas (1981). "On the audience commodity and its work". Media and cultural studies: 230–256.
- ^ a b c Fuchs, Christian (2014). "Dallas Smythe Reloaded: Critical Media and Communication Studies Today". The Audience Commodity in a Digital Age: Revisiting Critical Theory of Commercial Media: 267–288.
- ^ a b Caraway, Brett (2011). "Audience labor in the new media environment: A Marxiam revisiting of the audience commodity". Media, Culture & Society. 33 (5): 693–708.
- ^ Jhally, Sut (1982). "Probing the blindspot: The audience commodity". CTheory. 6 (1–2): 204–210.
- ^ Livant, Bill (1892). "Working at watching: A reply to Sut Jhally". CTheory. 6 (1–2): 211–217.
- ^ Maxwell, Rick (1991). "The image is gold: Value, the audience commodity, and fetishism". Journal of Film and Video: 29–45.