Social Media + Society | |
Mimetic Production in YouTube Toy Unboxing Videos | |
BenjaminNicoll1  | |
关键词: YouTube; mimesis; children; unboxing; toys; | |
DOI : 10.1177/2056305118790761 | |
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合) | |
来源: Sage Journals | |
【 摘 要 】
This article contributes to research on childrenâs participation on social media by analyzing âtoy unboxingâ videos. Toy unboxing videos are a popular genre on the video-sharing platform YouTube, in which children and adults record themselves unpacking and reviewing various commercial toys. Emerging research in this area has focused on case studies of how these videos are consumed within the home as a means of augmenting offline toys and play practices, or, more commonly, on case studies of how these videos fit within YouTubeâs broader economies of play and performance. Drawing on data produced through a content analysis of 100 recent toy unboxing videos, this article analyzes the place of children in the YouTube genreâs âaffinity space.â The toy unboxing videos are coded across five key categoriesâgenre, product, narration, production, and brandingâto analyze variations of expertise, professionalism, and promotion across the genre. The findings indicate that childrenâs modes of production as amateur content producers both shape and are shaped by the shared and standardized conventions of this video genre. That is, while well-known âprofessionalâ channels such as EvanTube often seek to produce a semblance of playful amateur authenticity, the ostensibly âamateurâ child unboxers mimic the production and branding strategies of the âprofessionalâ channels. We argue that this reciprocal relationship between professional and amateur content production can be best understood through the concept of âmimesis,â which characterizes the qualities of play and commercialization within the toy unboxing genre.
【 授权许可】
CC BY-NC
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO201910259406445ZK.pdf | 508KB | download |