2010
DOI: 10.1108/03090561011032306
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Shaping the body and technology

Abstract: PurposeThis paper aims to provide a theoretical analysis of contemporary brand communication for technology products, focused on how the human body functions as a metaphorical and communicative device, to shed insight into how technological brands make their products understandable, tangible, and attractive in interesting ways.Design/methodology/approachAn interdisciplinary conceptual review and analysis focuses on issues of metaphor and the body in marketing research and social theory. This analysis is discus… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Notably, whilst critical marketing theorists see technological marketplaces as a Panopticon (Buchanan-Oliver et al, 2010), a different view emerges from our study. In relatively new (digital) marketplaces such as Twitch, individuals perhaps find a greater degree of emancipation and freedom to create, engage, and become closer to their ideal selves.…”
Section: Contrasting Findings With Previous Researchmentioning
confidence: 72%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Notably, whilst critical marketing theorists see technological marketplaces as a Panopticon (Buchanan-Oliver et al, 2010), a different view emerges from our study. In relatively new (digital) marketplaces such as Twitch, individuals perhaps find a greater degree of emancipation and freedom to create, engage, and become closer to their ideal selves.…”
Section: Contrasting Findings With Previous Researchmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…Drawing on Foucault's views on control and freedom, critical marketing theorists have argued that technological advances in the marketplace, though touted as means of mass emancipation, are evolved forms of a Panopticon (Buchanan‐Oliver et al, 2010; Humphreys, 2006; Mick & Fournier, 1998). A Panopticon is an all‐seeing control system or prison, which was originally conceived by Jeremy Bentham (Crampton & Elden, 2016).…”
Section: Game Streams From a Foucauldian Viewpointmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When it comes to consumption, marketing and consumer culture scholars have thus asserted that it is through the radical contestation and the subsequent reconceptualisation of traditional accounts of the state of being human that the cyborgian consumer becomes a possibility (Campbell, 2010;Campbell et al, 2006;Giesler et al, 2009;Giesler & Venkatesh, 2005;Kozinets, 2015;Patsiaouras et al, 2014;Šimůnková, 2019). The cyborgian view would then break away from traditional logocentric grounds where 'consumers are theorized as information processors' (Giesler & Venkatesh, 2005, p. 661), or as disembodied, abstracted consciousnesses (Buchanan-Oliver et al, 2010;Denegri-Knott & Molesworth, 2013). Equally, a fixed, external social and natural reality -one that can be 'recorded' by an objective, rational, and scientific mind occupying a privileged centre -needs to be occluded (e.g.…”
Section: Technologies Of Consumption In Betweenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The general posthumanist tendency in marketing and consumer research scholarship thus steps in to shift the focus from such narrow, metaphysically-bounded accounts to much wider historical, socio-cultural and materialist contexts (Bettany & Kerrane, 2011;Buchanan-Oliver et al, 2010;also Askegaard & Linnet, 2011;Hill et al, 2014;Šimůnková, 2019). Instead of being approached as disembodied, logical minds who observe from a privileged standpoint outside a quantifiable reality, consumers should be seen as immersed in ever-changing environments from which the strict, formal hierarchies of being, ontological categories, unbreakable boundaries, dualistic models of subjectivity, and causal trajectories are to be gradually redefined.…”
Section: Technologies Of Consumption In Betweenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1,2 Consumers tend to experience tension between both love and hatred toward the technology in their lives and thus face an ongoing ambivalent state in their relationships with technological objects. 3 Personalized technologies (PTs) in mobile commerce present a representative case that can engender an ambivalent response from consumers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%