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Research output: Thesis › Doctoral Thesis
Research output: Thesis › Doctoral Thesis
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TY - BOOK
T1 - Technoculture and its Lived Consequences
T2 - A Terminal Marketing Approach
AU - Hoang Ngoc , Quynh
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - This thesis is situated within an ultra-realist vein of marketing scholarship – what has recently been called “Terminal Marketing” or “de-romanticist consumer research” – that seeks to countervail utopian assumptions of an all-empowered consumer subject. Focusing on the intersection of technology with consumer culture (i.e., “technoculture”) as an empirical context, this thesis introduces novel conceptualisations of consumer subjectivity, its disempowerment and depoliticisation. Combining the cultural theories of Mark Fisher, Slavoj Žižek, and Steve Redhead with empirical fieldwork involving a 12-monthnetnography and 21 in-depth interviews with those who seek to unplug themselves from technoculture (i.e., “digital detoxers”), the entrapment and foreclosure that frames technoculture and its subjectivities is conceptualised. Emergent findings are organised into three research chapters (one theoretical and two empirical manuscripts). Altogether, these chapters map out a dystopian, “terminal” stage of consumer capitalism populated by increasingly disenchanted and knowingly helpless subjects whose pro- and anti-market behaviours are barely distinguishable in terms of genuine autonomy or transformative power.In tracing the various contours of consumers’ inertia and bleak dissatisfactions with their everyday digital lives, the findings reveal an increasingly unbearable onto-affective atmosphere of inescapability that cannot be discharged in any meaningful way. In the absence of collective hope for genuine alternatives to the existing system, consumers are resigned to accept the perceived unchangeability of the structural conditions that perpetuate their attachment to market-mediated fantasies and market-located solutions. The thesis explores the consequences of living within what Terminal Marketing scholarship classifies as a state of “cancelled futures” under capitalism.
AB - This thesis is situated within an ultra-realist vein of marketing scholarship – what has recently been called “Terminal Marketing” or “de-romanticist consumer research” – that seeks to countervail utopian assumptions of an all-empowered consumer subject. Focusing on the intersection of technology with consumer culture (i.e., “technoculture”) as an empirical context, this thesis introduces novel conceptualisations of consumer subjectivity, its disempowerment and depoliticisation. Combining the cultural theories of Mark Fisher, Slavoj Žižek, and Steve Redhead with empirical fieldwork involving a 12-monthnetnography and 21 in-depth interviews with those who seek to unplug themselves from technoculture (i.e., “digital detoxers”), the entrapment and foreclosure that frames technoculture and its subjectivities is conceptualised. Emergent findings are organised into three research chapters (one theoretical and two empirical manuscripts). Altogether, these chapters map out a dystopian, “terminal” stage of consumer capitalism populated by increasingly disenchanted and knowingly helpless subjects whose pro- and anti-market behaviours are barely distinguishable in terms of genuine autonomy or transformative power.In tracing the various contours of consumers’ inertia and bleak dissatisfactions with their everyday digital lives, the findings reveal an increasingly unbearable onto-affective atmosphere of inescapability that cannot be discharged in any meaningful way. In the absence of collective hope for genuine alternatives to the existing system, consumers are resigned to accept the perceived unchangeability of the structural conditions that perpetuate their attachment to market-mediated fantasies and market-located solutions. The thesis explores the consequences of living within what Terminal Marketing scholarship classifies as a state of “cancelled futures” under capitalism.
KW - TECHNOLOGY
KW - consumer culture theory
U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1902
DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1902
M3 - Doctoral Thesis
PB - Lancaster University
ER -