The Evolution of Audience Uses and Gratifications: A Journey Through Media Engagement
Mots-clés :
Evolution, Media Research, Uses and Gratifications Theory, Audience Engagement.Résumé
This article explores the evolution of uses and gratifications research, a paradigm that emerged
in response to earlier theories of media’s absolute influence. Shifting the focus from what media
do to audiences toward what audiences actively do with media, the article offers a qualitative
and chronological analysis of the key conceptual, methodological, and empirical developments
in this field. It critically examines the contributions of leading scholars and major studies that
have shaped the trajectory of this research tradition. The findings suggest that the development
of uses and gratifications research can be divided into three distinct phases. The first phase,
beginning in the 1940s, marks the foundational studies that established the initial framework.
The second phase emerged in the 1970s, when uses and gratifications matured into a more
coherent and recognized research approach. The third phase, beginning in the early 1990s,
reflects a shift toward investigating how audiences engage with new media, especially
following the rise of the Internet as a dominant form of mass communication.
USA: 1,234
UK: 987
India: 2,345
France: 456
