Episode 10 - They’re all good dogs (and cats?)

21 mag 2021 · 45 min. 12 sec.
Episode 10 - They’re all good dogs (and cats?)
Descrizione

Are chihuahuas real dogs? Have you ever been to a Victorian cat tea party? How do dogs motivate us to be better? Anuja and Alev and their guests, Zeynep Arsel...

mostra di più
Are chihuahuas real dogs? Have you ever been to a Victorian cat tea party? How do dogs motivate us to be better? Anuja and Alev and their guests, Zeynep Arsel and Ghalia Shamayleh, a supervisor-PhD student team from Concordia University challenge the animal-human binaries in this episode and go to the cats & dogs.

Reading suggestions for this episode:

Abidin, C. (2015). Micromicrocelebrity: Branding babies on the internet. m/c Journal, 18(5).

Austin, J., & Irvine, L. (2020). “A Very Photogenic Cat”: Personhood, Social Status, and Online Cat Photo Sharing. Anthrozoös, 33(3), 441-450.

Bettany, S., & Daly, R. (2008). Figuring companion-species consumption: A multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound. Journal of Business Research, 61(5), 408-418.

Bettany, S., & Kerrane, B. (2011). The (post‐human) consumer, the (post‐avian) chicken and the (post‐object) Eglu: Towards a material‐semiotics of anti‐consumption. European Journal of Marketing.

Bettany, S. M., & Kerrane, B. (2018). Figuring the pecking order: Emerging child food preferences when species meet in the family environment. European Journal of Marketing, 52(12), 2334-2355.

Beverland, M. B., Farrelly, F., & Lim, E. A. C. (2008). Exploring the dark side of pet ownership: Status-and control-based pet consumption. Journal of Business Research, 61(5), 490-496.

Davison, P. (2012). The language of internet memes. The social media reader, 120-134.

Golbeck, J. (2011) “The more people I meet, the more I like my dog: A study of pet-oriented social networks on the Web”, First Monday, 16(2). doi: 10.5210/fm.v16i2.2859.

Granot, E., Alejandro, T. B., & Russell, L. T. M. (2014). A socio-marketing analysis of the concept of cute and its consumer culture implications. Journal of Consumer Culture, 14(1), 66-87.

Haraway, D. J. (2003). The companion species manifesto: Dogs, people, and significant otherness Chicago: Prickly Paradigm Press.

Heath, T. and Nixon, E., 2021. Immersive imaginative hedonism: Daydreaming as experiential ‘consumption’. Marketing Theory, p.14705931211004665.

Hirschman, Elizabeth C. "Consumers and Their Animal Companions." Journal of Consumer Research 20, no. 4 (1994): 616-32. Accessed May 20, 2021. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2489763.


Maddox, J. (2020). The secret life of pet Instagram accounts: Joy, resistance, and commodification in the Internet’s cute economy. New Media & Society, 1461444820956345.

J Nast, H. (2006). Critical pet studies?. Antipode, 38(5), 894.

Podhovnik, E. (2018). The Purrification of English: Meowlogisms in online communities. English Today, 34(3), 2-16.
mostra meno
Informazioni
Autore University of Southern Denmark
Sito -
Tag

Sembra che non tu non abbia alcun episodio attivo

Sfoglia il catalogo di Spreaker per scoprire nuovi contenuti

Corrente

Copertina del podcast

Sembra che non ci sia nessun episodio nella tua coda

Sfoglia il catalogo di Spreaker per scoprire nuovi contenuti

Successivo

Copertina dell'episodio Copertina dell'episodio

Che silenzio che c’è...

È tempo di scoprire nuovi episodi!

Scopri
La tua Libreria
Cerca