“It’s about finding and knowing myself”: Why Johannesburg-based South African Millennials consume self-help media

Using semi-structured, in-depth interviews with a group of ten middle-class, internet-connected, South African millennials in Johannesburg, Gauteng this analysis explores the psychosocial gratifications derived from their self-declared active sourcing and consumption of self-help media texts. Devel...

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Main Author: Simphiwe Emmanuel Rens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Johannesburg 2023-07-01
Series:Communicare
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Online Access:https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/1409
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author Simphiwe Emmanuel Rens
author_facet Simphiwe Emmanuel Rens
author_sort Simphiwe Emmanuel Rens
collection DOAJ
description Using semi-structured, in-depth interviews with a group of ten middle-class, internet-connected, South African millennials in Johannesburg, Gauteng this analysis explores the psychosocial gratifications derived from their self-declared active sourcing and consumption of self-help media texts. Developing within the uses and gratifications theoretical framework, the article finds that self-help media texts (books, blogs, videos, etc., significantly sourced from digital platforms via the internet) are sought as tools that offer a psychological “quick fix” to the day-to-day psychosocial “problems” that push the interviewed participants to seek coping mechanisms. The article presents evidence to demonstrate that self-help media texts are consumed by the interviewees to gratify a psychosocial need for self-knowledge where they engage self-help media texts as surveillance mediums on which they rely to better “find” and “know” themselves in relation to others, as far as socially “acceptable” interpersonal behaviour is concerned. As such, these Johannesburg-based South African millennials consume self-help media texts, and the moral grammar of norms, beliefs, and values about successful living encoded therein, as tools for self-management with the goal of “mastering” the self – in relation to others – to understand how best to behave to avoid the “mistakes” that impede the smooth-sailing of what these participants describe as their life journeys.
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spelling doaj-art-8b0bab0755aa4a6aa8d2807676444d292025-01-20T08:42:45ZengUniversity of JohannesburgCommunicare0259-00692957-79502023-07-0142110.36615/jcsa.v42i1.1409“It’s about finding and knowing myself”: Why Johannesburg-based South African Millennials consume self-help media Simphiwe Emmanuel Rens0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6101-8667Department of Communication Science, UNISA Using semi-structured, in-depth interviews with a group of ten middle-class, internet-connected, South African millennials in Johannesburg, Gauteng this analysis explores the psychosocial gratifications derived from their self-declared active sourcing and consumption of self-help media texts. Developing within the uses and gratifications theoretical framework, the article finds that self-help media texts (books, blogs, videos, etc., significantly sourced from digital platforms via the internet) are sought as tools that offer a psychological “quick fix” to the day-to-day psychosocial “problems” that push the interviewed participants to seek coping mechanisms. The article presents evidence to demonstrate that self-help media texts are consumed by the interviewees to gratify a psychosocial need for self-knowledge where they engage self-help media texts as surveillance mediums on which they rely to better “find” and “know” themselves in relation to others, as far as socially “acceptable” interpersonal behaviour is concerned. As such, these Johannesburg-based South African millennials consume self-help media texts, and the moral grammar of norms, beliefs, and values about successful living encoded therein, as tools for self-management with the goal of “mastering” the self – in relation to others – to understand how best to behave to avoid the “mistakes” that impede the smooth-sailing of what these participants describe as their life journeys. https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/1409advisory mediamedia audiencesmillennialsself-help mediauses and gratifications
spellingShingle Simphiwe Emmanuel Rens
“It’s about finding and knowing myself”: Why Johannesburg-based South African Millennials consume self-help media
Communicare
advisory media
media audiences
millennials
self-help media
uses and gratifications
title “It’s about finding and knowing myself”: Why Johannesburg-based South African Millennials consume self-help media
title_full “It’s about finding and knowing myself”: Why Johannesburg-based South African Millennials consume self-help media
title_fullStr “It’s about finding and knowing myself”: Why Johannesburg-based South African Millennials consume self-help media
title_full_unstemmed “It’s about finding and knowing myself”: Why Johannesburg-based South African Millennials consume self-help media
title_short “It’s about finding and knowing myself”: Why Johannesburg-based South African Millennials consume self-help media
title_sort it s about finding and knowing myself why johannesburg based south african millennials consume self help media
topic advisory media
media audiences
millennials
self-help media
uses and gratifications
url https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/1409
work_keys_str_mv AT simphiweemmanuelrens itsaboutfindingandknowingmyselfwhyjohannesburgbasedsouthafricanmillennialsconsumeselfhelpmedia