Online Quizzes as Viral, Consumption-Based Identities

Authors

  • Stephanie N. Berberick Pennsylvania State University
  • Matthew P. McAllister Pennsylvania State University College of Communications

Keywords:

identity, BuzzFeed, identity quizzes, native advertising, virality, digital capitalism, free labor

Abstract

Complexities in digital spaces problematize virtual-identity construction. Online commercialization trends that often take the form of native advertisements, including identity quizzes featured on websites such as BuzzFeed, exploit incentives for a branded self and the immaterial labor of users to create and share messages. Thus, identity politics are often depoliticized amid virtual environments that rely on ties between identity and consumption in either native advertisements or copy designed to draw users to advertisements. This article analyzes sponsored and unsponsored quizzes from BuzzFeed and resulting commentaries, arguing that in these cases, identity is often circumscribed around digestible, consumption-based “results.” This article also considers how the quiz phenomenon reflects trends in viral native advertising as it pertains to constructing virtual selves.

Author Biographies

Stephanie N. Berberick, Pennsylvania State University

Stephanie “Stevie” Berberick is a doctoral candidate and instructor at the Pennsylvania State University in the College of Communications. She has been published in the New York Sociologist and as a co-author in Communication, Culture, and Critique. She attends national and international conferences and teaches cultural and critical approaches to media studies.Doctoral CandidateInstructorPresident - Women's Studies Graduate Organization(315)235-5218  

Matthew P. McAllister, Pennsylvania State University College of Communications

Matthew P. McAllister is a professor and the Chair of Graduate Programs at Pennsylvania State University in the College of Communications. He is the author of The Commercialization of American Culture: New Advertising, Control and Democracy (1996, Sage). He has been published in various journals, including Journal of Communication and Critical Studies in Mass Communication. He is an award-winning pedagogue and teaches both undergraduate and graduate courses in the college.ProfessorChair of Graduate ProgramsPennsylvania State UniversityCollege of Communications(814)863-3322 

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Published

2016-07-15

Issue

Section

Articles