Bridging Boundaries in Consumption, Markets and Culture

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agencing
Arriving Refugees
Boundary Work
Bridging Boundaries
business culture
Category=JBCC
Category=KJS
Category=KJSM
consumer culture theory
consumer markets
consumption
Consumption Markets and Culture
cross-cultural consumption research
Data Set
dematerialization
Digital Virtual Consumption
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic analysis
ethnography
family boundaries
Family Identity
global consumer behaviour
Globalizing Mediascapes
Grassroots Responsibilization
Home Economics Teachers
Humanitarian Aid
Institutional Theory Lens
intersectionality in marketing
Kitchen Concerns
Kitchen Practices
makeshift markets
Moral Spectatorship
Person Object Relationship
Physical Books
Physical Collection
qualitative methodologies
Racist Multiculturalism
Researcher Diary Entries
Shared Family Identity
Sinhalese Families
South Asian Cultures
South Asian Families
Transformative Consumer Research
twentieth-century Swedish advertisements
Urban South Asian
visual content analysis

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367353049
  • Weight: 410g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Sep 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book focuses on the bridges that connect the dynamic relations between consumer actions, the marketplace, and cultural meanings.

Answering the challenge to do more than merely cross the boundaries between these fields, the authors in this volume also undertake the far harder work of bridging them. Consequently, this book is a rich and topical array of research projects which engage in a variety of theoretical and empirical boundary crossings. The authors’ diverse methodologies span archival research, visual content analysis, ethnography and phenomenological interviewing. Their research contexts are distinctly globally diverse, as reflected in the topics of their studies: aid in contemporary Syrian refugee camps in Germany; early twentieth-century Swedish advertisements for kitchens; family formation in twenty-first-century Sri Lanka; Brazilian book (de)collectors; and the signification of magazine covers in India.

Overall, the book makes for compelling reading across and beyond conventional boundaries associated with the study of consumption, markets and culture. This book was originally published as a peer-reviewed special issue of Consumption Markets & Culture.

Karen V. Fernandez is Associate Professor in Marketing at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. She utilises Consumer Culture Theory to understand consumers’ relationships with their meaningful possessions, places and technology. Her publications include articles in the Journal of Consumer Research, the Journal of Public Policy and Marketing, the Journal of Advertising, the European Journal of Marketing and the Journal of Business Research. She is an Associate Editor of Consumption, Markets & Culture and has received multiple research and "best reviewer" awards.

Bernardo Figueiredo is Senior Lecturer in Marketing at RMIT in Melbourne, Australia. His research examines how the globalization of markets and culture shapes consumption and marketing practices. He has a special interest in marketing issues related to consumer culture, mobility, multiculturalism, cosmopolitanism, value creation, and developing markets. His work has won awards at important conferences in the marketing and consumer research field. His publications include papers in the Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Business Research, Marketing Theory, the Journal of Macromarketing, Journal of Marketing Management, and Consumption, Markets and Culture.