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El. knyga: Contemporary Consumer Culture Theory [Taylor & Francis e-book]

Edited by (University of Notre Dame, USA), Edited by (York University, Canada)
  • Formatas: 318 pages, 2 Tables, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge Studies in Marketing
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2019
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315563947
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 180,03 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 257,19 €
  • Sutaupote 30%
  • Formatas: 318 pages, 2 Tables, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge Studies in Marketing
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Jun-2019
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315563947
Contemporary Consumer Culture Theory contains original research essays written by the premier thought leaders of the discipline from around the world that reflect the maturation of the field Customer Culture Theory over the last decade. The volume seeks to help break down the silos that have arisen in disciplines seeking to understand consumer culture, and speed both the diffusion of ideas and possibility of collaboration across frontiers.Contemporary Consumer Culture Theory begins with a re-evaluation of some of the fundamental notions of consumer behaviour, such as self and other, branding and pricing, and individual vs. communal agency then continuing with a reconsideration of role configurations as they affect consumption, examining in particular the ramifications of familial, gender, ethnic and national aspects of consumers’ lived experiences. The book move on to a reappraisal of the state of the field, examining the rhetoric of inquiry, the reflexive history and critique of the discipline, the prospect of redirecting the effort of inquiry to practical and humanitarian ends, the neglected wellsprings of our intellectual heritage, and the ideological underpinnings of the evolving construction of the concept of the brand. Contemporary Consumer Culture Theory is a reflective assessment, in theoretical, empirical and evocative keys, of the state of the field of consumer culture theory and an indication of the scholarly directions in which the discipline is evolving providing reflection upon a rapidly expanding discipline and altered consumption-scapes by some of its prime movers.
List of Tables and Figures
viii
List of Contributors
ix
1 Reading New Currents in Consumer Culture Theory
1(2)
Eileen Fischer
John F. Sherry Jr.
PART I Rethinking Fundamental Notions: Selves, Others, and Systems
3(82)
2 Consumers in an Age of Autonomous and Semiautonomous Machines
5(28)
Russell Belk
3 Market Value of Diversity and Ethnicity: A Cultural Analysis of African American Media Consumption and Representation
33(17)
Alladi Venkatesh
4 Consuming the Idea of the Brand
50(9)
Sidney J. Levy
5 Is the Price Right? Moral and Cultural Frames for Understanding Pricing Systems
59(26)
Melanie Wallendorf
PART II Revisiting Role Configurations: Families, Gender, and Consumption
85(88)
6 The Conceit of the Gift: Exploring the Gift Circuits of Registry
87(20)
Tonya Williams Bradford
John F. Sherry Jr.
7 Consumption on the Feminist Agenda
107(23)
Linda Scott
8 Ethnographies of a Mediterranean Vestaval: The Passeggiata
130(22)
Bernard Cova
Veronique Cova
Hounaida El Jurdi
9 Reinvigorating the Sherlock Myth: Elementary Gender Bending
152(21)
Pauline Maclaran
Cele Otnes
PART III Reassessing the Field: Whence and Whither?
173(110)
10 Begin as You Mean to Go On: Reflections on the Rhetoric of Research
175(20)
Stephen Brown
11 The Consumer Culture Theory Movement: Critique and Renewal
195(20)
A. Fuat Firat
Nikhilesh Dholakia
12 Consumer Culture Strategy
215(10)
Douglas B. Holt
13 Redressing an Alleged Lacuna: Scholarly Models for an Engaged Ethnology of Consumer Culture
225(26)
Eric J. Arnould
14 Brand Doings in a Performative Perspective: An Analysis of Conceptual Brand Discourses
251(32)
Matthias Bode
Dannie Kjeldgaard
PART IV Poetry
283(14)
15 Leakage
285(1)
John W. Schouten
16 Digital Self
286(2)
Hilary Downey
17 Guesswork
288(1)
David Glen Mick
18 Schooling
289(1)
Pilar Rojas Gaviria
19 4play
290(1)
John F. Sherry Jr.
20 Self-Service in the Fourth Circle of Hell
291(2)
Sandra D. Smith
21 Self(IE) Analysis
293(1)
Terrance Gabel
22 Waste Water Treatment
294(3)
Roel Wijland
PART V Conclusion
297(10)
23 Distilling Insights to Mobilize Responses: Anticipating Trajectories of Research and Intervention
299(8)
John F. Sherry Jr.
Eileen Fischer
Index 307
John F. Sherry, Jr. is the Raymond W. & Kenneth G. Herrick Professor of Marketing at the University of Notre Dame. He is a past President of both the Association for Consumer Research and the Consumer Culture Theory Consortium, and a former Associate Editor of the Journal of Consumer Research.

Eileen Fischer is a Professor of Marketing and holds the Anne and Max Tanenbaum Chair of Entrepreneurship and Family Enterprise in the Schulich School of Business at York University. She is Co-Editor of Journal of Consumer Research, and President of the Consumer Culture Theory Consortium.