European Journal of Cultural Studies
1–16
© The Author(s) 2014
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DOI: 10.1177/1367549414563297
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EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF
Valuing audience passions:
From Smythe to Tarde
Adam Arvidsson
University of Milano, Italy
Tiziano Bonini
IULM University of Milano, Italy
Abstract
Audience research is undergoing substantial transformation. The old ‘eyeballs’
paradigm has been losing adequacy since, at least, the 1980s. At the same time, social
media platforms like Twitter and Facebook provide data that allow a far deeper and
more intrusive view into the everyday life of media consumers. As a result, many
companies are now developing systems based on social media data in order to
represent, measure and value audience dynamics in new ways. This transformation
of audience research has been paralleled by the rise of concepts like influence, clout
or passion as a way of conceiving of audience value. But how are such affective
values created? And how can the new semantics of value as passion be critiqued?
In this article, we will address that question by thinking through two theoretical
models of audience value. Dallas Smythe’s theory of the audience commodity and
Gabriel Tarde’s theory of public value. We will suggest that present developments in
the media economy make Tarde’s model more relevant for understanding the value
of contemporary audience activity. We suggest that this might lead to a redirection
of critical theories of audience value toward a focus on constructing the kinds of
devices that are able to represent audience value in ways that take a broader range
of interests into consideration.
Keywords
Affect, attention economy, audience, broadcast, reputation economy, Smythe,
social media, Tarde
Corresponding author:
Tiziano Bonini, Arts and Media Department, IULM University of Milano, via Carlo Bo 4, 20143
Milano, Italy.
Email: tiziano.bonini@iulm.it
563297ECS 0 0 10.1177/1367549414563297European Journal of Cultural StudiesArvidsson and Bonini
research-article 2014
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