I was happy to learn that my book Consumer Management in the Internet Age: How 
Customers Became Managers in the Modern Workplace (Lexington Books, 2019) is 
being reissued in paperback. If anyone is interested in reading (and 
potentially reviewing) it, shoot me an email.

Best regards,

Joshua

https://newbooksnetwork.com/joshua-sperber-consumer-management-in-the-internet-age-how-customers-became-managers-in-the-modern-workplace-lexington-2019/

Blurbs:

"The consumer has been alternatively depicted as the sovereign of the market, 
the unwitting dupe of advertisers, and the heroic boycotter whose activism 
helped create democracy. In this splendid and original study, Joshua Sperber 
gives us the consumer as the disciplinary agent of modern capitalism. Combining 
eye-opening empirical investigations of Yelp and Rate My Professor with a 
sophisticated Marxist account of the gig economy, Sperber shows how the 
consumer is increasingly serving a managerial function in the economy. Whether 
through surveillance of workers, detailed internet surveys, and online ratings 
and reviews, the consumer is doing for free what managers were once paid to do. 
With a prose that is as powerful as it is plain, Sperber documents how critical 
the consumer is to production: not as a market of taste outside the production 
process, but as a disciplinary force within the production process."
— Corey Robin, Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center

"Joshua Sperber has made an important contribution in this research monograph 
to our understanding of prosumers by making it clear that their power (on Yelp 
and Rate My Professor) has grown online; they become not only consumers and 
producers, but also managers."
— George Ritzer, University of Maryland

"Joshua Sperber’s Consumer Management in the Internet Age offers an insightful 
analysis of the ways that the Internet, specifically the websites Yelp and 
RateMyProfessors.com, conscripts diners and students into the project of 
employee management. Written in lively and engaging prose, Sperber draws 
historically deep and useful critiques of capitalism into this volatile and 
protean social terrain in order to show how the traditionally hierarchical 
relationship between management and labor seems to have been destabilized but 
is, in fact, being reproduced."

— Joe Rollins, The Graduate Center, CUNY


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