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Routledge Handbook of Digital Consumption 2nd edition [Kõva köide]

Edited by (York University, Canada), Edited by
  • Formaat: Hardback, 556 pages, kõrgus x laius: 246x174 mm, kaal: 1100 g, 17 Tables, black and white; 17 Line drawings, black and white; 6 Halftones, black and white; 23 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge International Handbooks
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Sep-2022
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032329599
  • ISBN-13: 9781032329598
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 556 pages, kõrgus x laius: 246x174 mm, kaal: 1100 g, 17 Tables, black and white; 17 Line drawings, black and white; 6 Halftones, black and white; 23 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge International Handbooks
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Sep-2022
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032329599
  • ISBN-13: 9781032329598
Teised raamatud teemal:
Since the publication of the ground-breaking first edition, there has been an exponential growth in research and literature about the digital world and its enormous potential benefits and threats. Fully revised and updated, this new edition brings together an expertly curated and authoritative overview of the impact and emerging horizons of digital consumption.

Divided into sections, it addresses key topics including digital entertainment, self-representation, communication, Big Data, digital spirituality, online surveillance, and algorithmic advertising. It explores developments such as consumer data collection techniques, peer-to-peer payment systems, augmented reality, and AI-enhanced consumer well-being, as well as digital transgression, secrecy, crypto-currencies, NFTs, and cultural concerns such as the spread of conspiracy theories and fake news. From digital influencers, digital nomads, and digital neo-tribalism to robots and cyborgs, it explores existences that blur boundaries between humans and machines, reality and the metaverse, and the emerging "technoculture" a state of all-encompassing digital being.

This unique volume is an essential resource for scholars, practitioners, and policy makers, and will continue to provide a new generation of readers with a deep understanding of the universe of digital consumption.

Arvustused

"Llamas and Belk have brought together an assemblage of cutting-edge academic essays that examine virtually every aspect of the modern digital consumer. Much has changed in the past few years and its all here. The volume is a wide-ranging conceptual and topical feast of how the latest advances and future developments in the digital world impact todays consumer. The menu includes AI-robot-consumer interactions, Tinder, digital fandom, non-human influencers, digital spirituality, the technoculture of Zoom and anti-vaxxers, and so much more. Researchers, teachers, and practitioners alike will come away updated, challenged, and inspired."

Tom Novak, George Washington University, USA

"Worldwide, the dominance of the digital economy represents the most significant paradigm shift of the 21st century. This book provides the vital knowledge to help academics, practitioners, pundits, and the public grasp the core concepts, contradictions, and contributions of this commercial sphere. Containing scholarly riches produced by over 60 authors, it traverses the gamut of digital consumption topics exploring how bits, bytes, and bots shape consumer behavior and consumer culture in the digital arena."

Cele Otnes, Graduate School of Business, Columbia University, USA

"We are all living in a digital world, but how does that change the people living in it? The Routledge Handbook of Digital Consumption takes an intellectually critical look into the digital world. With an emphasis on qualitative approaches, this volume contains thoughtful chapters from deep digital thinkers. Taken as a whole, the book steps back to view the digital domain in a broad, multidisciplinary way, taking into account the philosophical, sociological, and psychological impact of the digital environment, and considering the broad, societal implications as well. Truly understanding the digital world demands an eclectic viewpoint, and this volume provides a wide-ranging view of the digital forces that are changing our lives."

Roland T. Rust, Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, USA

"Such is the transformative power of the digital revolution on both consumer behaviour and more broadly consumer culture that hot on the heels of the first edition comes this second edition of The Routledge Handbook of Digital Consumption. The editors have again assembled a super collection of essays from leading academics in their fields, arranged into seven broad themes, from how to research digital consumers, through to more critical perspectives on how digitalization is transforming consumer practices, societies, and cultures. For students and their teachers who are trying to keep pace with the profound changes of the digital revolution on consumer behaviour this is a very timely and welcome additional resource. Ask your library to stock this book now!"

Avi Shankar, University of Bath, UK

"Thought provoking, cutting edge, and comprehensive coverage by global experts! A must read for anyone interested in digital consumption!"

Jochen Wirtz, NUS Business School, National University of Singapore

"Llamas and Belk, acknowledged experts on the digital transformation, have assembled an extraordinary group of scholars. There simply is no other handbook that portrays our digital world in such detail. In my view, a must read for any researcher in the social sciences and any business practitioner looking for consumer insight to drive business growth."

Bernd Schmitt, Columbia Business School, USA

"As companies from Facebook to Microsoft rebrand and reconstitute to align with the metaverse, a fulsome foundation in the consumer behaviors constituting not just a life engaged online, but a digital life lived entirely within a digital world, becomes paramount. Enter this handbook and its expert guide to the complexities and conundrums of digital consumption 3.0."

Susan Fournier, Boston University, USA

List of Figures
xii
List of Tables
xiii
About the Contributors xiv
PART I What's Digital?
1(72)
1 Living in a Digital Society
3(19)
Rosa Llamas
Russell Belk
2 Digital Nomadism as Temporal Privilege
22(13)
Aleksandrina Atanasova
Fleura Bardhi
Giana M. Eckhardt
Laetitia Mimoun
3 How Digitalization Blurs Boundaries, Makes Things Ungraspable, and Affects Psychological Appropriation
35(12)
Bernadette Kamleitner
Michail D. Kokkoris
4 Transhumanism and the Phenomenology of Cyborg Senses
47(13)
Vitor M. Lima
5 Researching the Black Box: A Call for Methodological Diversity, Transdisciplinarity, and Creativity in Research on Smart Digital Consumption
60(13)
Jonas Foehr
Claas Christian Germelmann
PART II Representing the Self and Others
73(64)
6 The Evolution of Online Self-Presentation: From Programmable Freeform Websites to Algorithmized Templates that Encourage Commercially Exploitable Content
75(11)
Ashok Kumar Kaliyamurthy
Hope Jensen Schau
Mary C. Gilly
7 Digital Identity: The Postmodern Consumer Chameleon
86(12)
Michael R. Solomon
8 Digital Payment, "Venmo Me" Culture, and Sociality
98(13)
Jenna Drenten
9 From Blogs to Platforms: Content Landscape and Affordances
111(13)
Ghalia Shamayleh
Zeynep Arsel
10 Chatbots: From Eliza and Alexa to Therapy-Bots, and Sexbots
124(13)
Russell Belk
PART III Researching the Digital Consumer
137(66)
11 Robots: Friend or Foe, Master or Servant?
139(13)
Marat Bakpayev
12 Understanding Technoculture
152(14)
Robert V. Kozinets
13 Critical Issues in Artificial Intelligence Algorithms and Their Implications for Digital Marketing
166(12)
Elanor Colleoni
Daniela Corsaro
14 Utilizing Digital Reality in Intergenerational Research
178(12)
Pragea G. Putra
Karen V. Fernandez
Michael S.W. Lee
15 The Possibilities and Pitfalls of Capturing Livestreamed Performances
190(13)
Toni Eagar
Natalie A. Mitchell
Kevin D. Thomas
Yingnan Shi
PART IV Communicating, Interacting, and Socializing
203(64)
16 Considering the Impacts of Transgressive Behaviors among Interactive Online Audiences
205(13)
Alex Baudet
Marie-Agnes Parmentier
Eileen Fischer
17 You'll Never Walk Alone: Socializing and Finding Your Tribe in a Digital Age
218(11)
Bernard Coua
Laurence Dessart
18 Capitalist Subjectivity, Tinder, and the Emotionalization of the Web
229(12)
Eva Illouz
Dan M. Kotliar
19 They Aren't Secret, They Aren't Hiding, and Some Online Communities Are More Dangerous Than Ever
241(14)
Ekant Veer
20 A `Thumbs Up' and `Thumbs Down' for Thumb Culture: The Paradoxical Nature of Smartphones
255(12)
Katie Thompson
Anthony Patterson
PART V Using Digital
267(82)
21 From Techno-Utopianism to Personal Panopticon and Beyond: A Call for a Revised Self-Tracking Research Agenda
269(15)
Matthias Bode
Dorthe Brogard Kristensen
22 Transformations in Digital Virtual Consumption
284(13)
Janice Denegri-Knott
Rebecca Jenkins
Mike Molesworth
23 Consumer Decision Making in Omnichannel Environments
297(12)
Elfriede Penz
Margaret K. Hogg
24 Patient Experience Assemblages on Digital Health Platforms
309(13)
Handan Vicdan
Nikhilesh Dholakia
25 Stock Investing in the Digital Age
322(13)
Jonathan Schroeder
Detlev Zwick
26 How Do Consumers (Re-)organize Their Lives Through Digital Decluttering?
335(14)
Johanna F. Gollnhofer
Birte Karoline Manke
PART VI Playing, Praying, Educating, and Entertaining
349(62)
27 The Perpetual Traveler -- Hypermobility in a Connected World
351(11)
Ulrike Gretzel
28 Digital Consumer Spirituality
362(14)
Jannsen Santana
Katharina C. Husemann
Giana M. Eckhardt
29 Education in a Digital Age: Do We Need More Innovation in Educational Innovations?
376(8)
Pedro De Bruyckere
30 Digital Fandom (Revisited): Exploring the Role of the Hypermediated Fan as Trickster
384(15)
Clinton Lanier Jr.
C. Scott Rader
Aubrey R. Fowler
31 Online Games: Consuming Experiences and Interacting in Virtual Worlds
399(12)
Marlon Dalmoro
Joao Pedro dos Santos Fleck
Carlos Alberto Vargas Rossi
PART VII Issues of Concern in Society and Culture
411(118)
32 The Double Edge of Diversity in a Digital World
413(12)
Akon E. Ekpo
33 Identity Expressions of Agender Individuals in a Digital World
425(11)
Morgan Ketola
Schyler Selander
Ayalla Ruvio
34 Online Privacy as Space: Concepts, Issues, and Research Avenues for Digital Consumption
436(11)
Ian Grant
Kathryn Waite
35 The Power of Digital Integration: The Normalization of Tracking and Surveillance Technologies
447(14)
Guojun (Sawyer) He
Eric Ping Hung Li
Matt Husain
36 Online Consumer Activism 2.5: Youth at the Forefront of the Global Climate Crisis
461(14)
B. Yasanthi Perera
Pia A. Albinsson
Sarita Ray Chaudhury
37 The Digital Transformation of Consumer Movements
475(14)
Jay M. Handelman
38 Models of Viral Propagation in Digital Contexts: How Messages and Ideas -- From Internet Memes to Fake News -- Created by Consumers, Bots, and Marketers Spread
489(13)
Tien Ee Dominic Yeo
39 `Posting Sexy Images and Still Being Respected as a Woman': Perspectives on Human and Non-Human Influencers
502(12)
Magdalena Petersson Mclntyre
40 Consumer Online (Dis)Trust: A Decade Later
514(15)
M. Saeid Kermani
Peter R. Darke
Michael K. Brady
Afterword: The Internet's Effects on Consumption: Useful, Harmful, Playful 529(12)
John Deighton
Leora Kornfeld
Index 541
Rosa Llamas is a lecturer in marketing at several business schools across Europe. She is also a mentor and consultant. Her work is based on qualitative methods, has a global approach, and aims at igniting individual and societal transformations.

Russell Belk is York University Distinguished Research Professor, Royal Society of Canada Fellow, and Kraft Foods Canada Chair in Marketing at the Schulich School of Business in York University, Canada.