Cooperative affordances: How instant messaging apps afford learning, resistance and solidarity among food delivery workers

被引:21
作者
Bonini, Tiziano [1 ]
Trere, Emiliano [2 ]
Yu, Zizheng [3 ]
Singh, Swati [4 ]
Cargnelutti, Daniele [5 ]
Lopez-Ferrandez, Francisco Javier [6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Siena, Sociol Culture & Commun, Siena, Italy
[2] Cardiff Univ, Sch Journalism Media & Culture, Data Agcy & Media Ecol, Cardiff, Wales
[3] Univ Greenwich, Sch Business, Advertising & Mkt Commun, London, England
[4] Univ Delhi, Indraprastha Coll Women, Dept Multimedia & Mass Commun, Delhi, India
[5] Univ Guanajuato, Programme Crit Theory, Guanajuato, Mexico
[6] Univ Rey Juan Carlos, Mostoles, Spain
来源
CONVERGENCE-THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH INTO NEW MEDIA TECHNOLOGIES | 2024年 / 30卷 / 01期
关键词
Gig economy; online food delivery; affordance theory; algorithmic solidarity; community of practice; algorithmic resistance; instant messaging apps; COMMUNITIES; NETWORKS; ECONOMY; ISSUES;
D O I
10.1177/13548565231153505
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
This paper aims to understand the practices and meanings associated with the creation and use of private chat groups on instant messaging services such as WhatsApp, Telegram, Messenger and WeChat that are accessible only to platform workers of online food delivery services. We draw on participant observation in five countries (Italy, Spain, Mexico, China, and India), in-depth interviews with 68 food delivery couriers and digital ethnography (Pink et al., 2015) within dozens of online private chat groups of food delivery workers. Our fieldwork shows that private chat groups are extremely relevant in the daily work of delivery workers and are appropriated to restore forms of mutualism not afforded by the food delivery apps. Following Costa (2018) and her concept of affordances-in-practice, we describe how the practice of online private chat groups created by platform workers affords: (1) the emergence of communities of practice; (2) resistance and contempt; (3) mutualism and solidarity. We argue that these workers 'enact' the affordances of instant messaging apps, to supplement - from below - the affordances of food delivery apps that were denied or ignored by food delivery companies. We argue that these affordances constitute cooperative affordances. This concept captures the cooperative nature of peer-to-peer communication that occurs within the informal online chat groups created by the workers themselves. Finally, this article contributes to affordance theory by highlighting how affordances are not immanent properties of artifacts, or 'invariants', as argued by Gibson (1979), but can be 'enacted' by specific users, like food delivery workers, within specific social and cultural contexts.
引用
收藏
页码:554 / 571
页数:18
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