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Handbook of Research on Identity Theory in Marketing [Kietas viršelis]

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The Handbook of Research on Identity Theory in Marketing features cutting-edge research that delves into the origins and consequences of identity loyalty and organizes these insights around five basic identity principles that span nearly every consumer marketing subdomain.

The Handbook explores [ 1] what makes an identity come to mind [ 2] what creates strong associations between identities and products [ 3] how consumers use brands to verify who they are or want to become [ 4] how consumption enhances or resolves conflict amongst identities and [ 5] how marketing and consumption becomes particularly relevant to particular identities. Each of these five principles are fully analyzed by a who's who of world-class international marketing scholars.

This Handbook is a comprehensive and state of the art treatment of identity and marketing: An authoritative and practical guide for academics, brand managers, marketers, public policy advocates and even intellectually curious consumers.

Contributors include: J. Angle, K. Aquino, J.J. Argo, A. Barasch, D.A. Briley, L.N. Chaplin, S. Chen, N.V. Coleman, S. Connors, S.W. Dagogo-Jack, D.W. Dahl, S. Danziger, K.G. DeMarree, K. Diehl, S.L. Dommer, L. Dunn, K.M. Durante, J. Edson Escalas, I. Gallo, T. Gaustad, M. Graso, L. Grewal, V. Griskevicius, G.R. Henderson, T. Hill, K.C. Husemann, G.V. Johar, A.C. Jones, K. Jung, K.L. Kettle, C. Lamberton, J. Laran, C. Lelchuk, E. Leung, T.M. Lowrey, B. McFerran, R. Mehta, A.C. Morales, H. Nikolova, E. Ok, J.G. Olson, G. Paolacci, A.W. Perkins, S. Puntoni, T. Rank-Christman, R. Scott, J. Shang, L.J. Shrum, B. Simpson, K. Spangenberg, A.T. Stephen, L. Weiss, S.C. Wheeler, K. White, K. Wilcox, K.P. Winterich, L. Xu, G. Zauberman

Recenzijos

'Understanding the relationship between consumption and identity is a cornerstone of recent consumer research, providing a crucial tool for examining the meaning of consumption and its multiple critical roles in consumers' lives. Reed and Forehand have provided an extremely useful conceptual framework and assembled an outstanding set of authors and compelling chapters detailing the most current ideas, theories, and findings on identity and consumption. This book is an absolute must for any consumer researcher interested in identity!' --James R. Bettman, Duke University, US Americus Reed and Mark Forehand's Handbook of Research on Identity Theory in Marketing is a testimony to the aphorism that there is nothing as practical as a good theory. In this case, five principles of identity salience, association, verification, conflict and relevance that anchor the scholarly contributions in the Handbook. If brand managers are accidental psychologists trying to understand how brands activate human identities, this book provides fertile foundation for reflection on how managerial theories in use might move from implicit to explicit. --Rohit Deshpande, Harvard Business School, US

List of figures
viii
List of tables
ix
List of contributors
x
Introduction: the long and winding road to understanding identity theory and marketing 1(6)
Americus Reed II
Mark Forehand
Quick chapter overviews 7(23)
PART I THE IDENTITY SALIENCE PRINCIPLE
1 Identity salience: understanding when identity affects consumption
30(14)
Keri L. Kettle
2 Nobody has to lose: introducing the concurrent identity and goal activation (CIGA) framework
44(13)
Juliano Laran
3 An evolutionary approach to identity research
57(15)
Aziza C. Jones
Kristina M. Durante
Vladas Griskevicius
4 How signaling motives and identity salience influence luxury consumption
72(13)
Keith Wilcox
5 The role of identity salience in creative thinking
85(12)
Ravi Mehta
Lidan Xu
Darren W. Dahl
6 Branding virtuous victimhood: how activating the salience of a consumer's moral identity motivates resource transfers to victim groups
97(15)
Maja Graso
Karl Aquino
Ekin Ok
PART II THE IDENTITY ASSOCIATION PRINCIPLE
7 Implicit egocentrism in consumer behavior
112(13)
Scott Connors
Andrew W. Perkins
8 Reminiscing on self-brand connections: differentiating experiential versus symbolic origins
125(16)
Jennifer Edson Escalas
Inigo Gallo
Tarje Gaustad
9 Ownership and identity: a cognitive perspective
141(17)
Gita Venkataramani Johar
Jaeyeon Chung
Liad Weiss
10 Temporal identity and the pursuit of self-enhancement
158(14)
Sokiente W. Dagogo-Jack
11 A framework for considering dissociative identity effects in consumption
172(14)
Bonnie Simpson
Lea Dunn
Katherine White
PART III THE IDENTITY VERIFICATION PRINCIPLE
12 Identity and compensatory consumption
186(13)
Derek D. Rucker
Christopher Cannon
13 Associations matter: revisiting the threat typology model
199(13)
Katie Spangenberg
Justin Angle
14 Memory pointers and identity
212(13)
Gal Zauberman
Kristin Diehl
Alixandra Barasch
15 Identity, personal continuity and psychological connectedness across time and over transformation
225(15)
Oleg Urminsky
Daniel Bartels
16 How technology shapes identity-based consumer behavior
240(15)
Eugina Leung
Gabriele Paolacci
Stefano Puntoni
17 Identity verification through pain in extraordinary consumer experiences
255(15)
Rebecca Scott
Katharina C. Husemann
Tim Hill
18 The creation of identity and brand meaning: the automatic versus creative use of mental models in language
270(15)
Colette Lelchuk
Marianne Gordon
Torsten Ringberg
David Luna
PART IV THE IDENTITY CONFLICT PRINCIPLE
19 The role of self-structure in managing identity conflict
285(13)
Karen Page Winterich
Nicole Verrochi Coleman
Sara Loughran Dommer
20 Causal beliefs in the self-concept and identity-based consumption
298(15)
Stephanie Y. Chen
21 No (wo)man is an island: dyadic decision-making and identity conflict
313(19)
Hristina Nikolova
Cait Lamberton
22 Cultural identities in the era of globalization: implications for consumer behavior
332(14)
Carlos J. Torelli
Hyewon Oh
23 Prevalence, antecedents and consequences of actual-desired attitude discrepancies
346(15)
S. Christian Wheeler
Kenneth G. DeMarree
PART V THE IDENTITY RELEVANCE PRINCIPLE
24 Religious identity in marketing
361(13)
Joseph E. Barbour
Naomi Mandel
Adam B. Cohen
25 Political ideology: basis for a dynamic social identity
374(14)
Donnel A. Briley
Kiju Jung
Shai Danziger
26 Identity in the digital age
388(16)
Lauren Grewal
Andrew T. Stephen
21 The role of identity relevance in the retail environment
404(13)
Jennifer Argo
28 Identity and charitable giving: the six-self framework
417(17)
Jen Shang
29 Children's materialism and identity development
434(14)
Lan Nguyen Chaplin
L.J. Shrum
Tina M. Lowrey
30 Identity-based perceptions of others' consumption choices
448(14)
Jenny G. Olson
Brent McFerran
Andrea C. Morales
Darren W. Dahl
31 When do identity-relevant symbols backfire? An exploration of identity-symbolic fixed and malleable connotations
462(13)
Tracy Rank-Christman
Geraldine Rosa Henderson
Index 475
Edited by Americus Reed II, Professor of Marketing, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania and Mark Forehand, Professor of Marketing, The Foster School of Business, University of Washington, US