Commodification of Wellness

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A01=Juliana Luna Mora
aspirational identity
Author_Juliana Luna Mora
Brand management
Branding
Business ethics
Category=KJS
Category=KNS
Conscious luxury
Consumer culture
cultural capital theory
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ethical branding
Ethical luxury consumption
gendered consumption
influencers
Luxury brands
Luxury fashion
luxury marketing
luxury wellness market analysis
postfeminist consumerism
Postfeminist theory
spiritual commodification
Wellness industry
Yoga

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032829449
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book critically analyses and documents a shift of ethical consumption patterns through Western yoga commodities, services, and transformational experiences that affect women within consumer culture. Western yoga uses fashion and luxury branding strategies to promote commodities that support an individualised, exclusive, and privatised quest for meaning, ritual, belonging, and community. These new status signifiers demonstrate how Western yoga has become an essential contemporary sign and symbol of the aspirational class. This book thus discusses how aspirational Western yoga brands, yoga studios, and social media influencers commodify wellness by distributing cultural capital as postfeminist spiritual capital through the promotion of exclusive and consciously minded aesthetic and ethical transformational experiences within the wellness industry.

Through the contemporary case studies presented in this book, the reader will be exposed to the complex tactics that yoga brands, yoga studios, and ‘yogalebrities’ use to generate aspirational conscious luxury commodities that promise entangled physical and spiritual distinction. This book reveals how yoga practitioners are encouraged to arrive at self-optimisation and self-empowerment not after the trials and tribulations of the human experience but after a highly controlled and exclusive experiential economic transaction that anchors the ego to bodily labour and elitist luxury fashion design ideals. These case studies will expose the reader to how these new consumption patterns converge, stylising and commodifying the psychic life of women.

This book will appeal to an academic audience with an interest in fashion and luxury studies, luxury management, consumer culture, gender studies, and critical spiritual practices.

Juliana Luna Mora is an early-career researcher and lecturer at the RMIT School of Fashion and Textiles, Australia. Juliana works at the intersection of critical luxury and fashion, embodied practice and consumer culture. Juliana specifically looks into ethical luxury consumption products, body-mind practices, and spiritual lifestyles and experiences. Through her research, Juliana aims to support a more just and inclusive society.

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