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The Routledge Companion to Identity and Consumption.

""Tell me what you eat, I'll tell you who you are, "" said Anthelme Brillat-Savarin. Today, ""You are what you consume"" is more apt. Barbara Krueger's ironic twist of Descartes - ""I shop therefore I am""--Has lost its irony. Suc...

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Détails bibliographiques
Cote:Libro Electrónico
Auteur principal: Ruvio, Ayalla A.
Autres auteurs: Belk, Russell W.
Format: Électronique eBook
Langue:Inglés
Publié: Hoboken : Taylor and Francis, 2013.
Collection:Routledge companions in business, management and accounting.
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:Texto completo
Table des matières:
  • Front Cover; The Routledge Companion To Identity and Consumption; Copyright Page; Contents; List of illustrations; List of contributors; Preface; I: What is the self in the context of consumption?; I.I Conceptions of the self within consumption; 1. Culture and the self: Implications for consumer behavior: Shinobu Kitayama and Jiyoung Park; 2. The symbiosis model of identity augmentation: Self-expansion and self-extension as distinct strategies: Paul M. Connell and Hope Jensen Schau; 3. The dialogical consumer self: Shalini Bahl; I. II Emotions and the self.
  • 4. The emotional self: Nicole Verrochi Coleman and Patti Williams5. Beloved material possessions: Ends or means?: John L. Lastovicka and Nancy J. Sirianni; 6. Overweight and emotional identity projects: Mariam Beruchashvili and Risto Moisio; 7. Disgust and identity: Andrea Morales and Eugenia Wu; I. III Extending the self into possessions; 8. Extended self in a digital age: Russell W. Belk; 9. We are what we buy?: Keisha M. Cutright, Adriana Samper and Gavan J. Fitzsimons; 10. Exploring cultural differences in the extended self: Phoebe W.S. Wong and Margaret K. Hogg.
  • I. IV Stigma, sacrifice, and self11. Stigma, identity, and consumption: Özlem Sandika and Güliz Ger; 12. (Re)Enacting motherhood: Self-sacrifice and abnegation in the kitchen: Benedetta Cappellini and Elizabeth Parsons; 13. Masculine self-presentation: Jacob Östberg; II: The dynamic self: Transformation, change, support and control; II. I Self-transformation; 14. Conflicting selves and the role of possessions: A process view of transgenders' self-identity conflict: Ayalla A. Ruvio and Russell W. Belk.
  • 15. Self-transformation and AIDS poster children: Ingeborg Astrid Kleppe and Marylouise Caldwell16. Cosmetic surgery and self-transformation: Shay Sayre; II. II Life cycle and self-change; 17. Adolescent consumption and the pursuit of "cool": David B. Wooten and James A. Mourey; 18. Self-brand connections in children: Development from childhood toadolescence: Deborah Roedder John and Lan Nguyen Chaplin; 19. Aging and consumption: Carolyn Yoon, Ian Skurnik and Stephanie M. Carpenter; II. III Self-esteem and self-support.
  • 20. Existential insecurity and the self: Aric Rindfleisch and James E. Burroughs21. Compensatory consumption: Derek D. Rucker and Adam D. Galinsky; 22. Self-threats and consumption: Jaehoon Lee and L.J. Shrum; II. IV Controlling the self; 23. Self-control and spending: Lauren G. Block and Keith Wilcox; 24. Culture and self-regulation: The influence of self-construal onimpulsive consumption L.J. Shrum and Yinlong Zhang; 25. Reminders of money change the self-concept: Kathleen D. Vohs; III: Social and cultural aspects of self and consumption; III. I Other vs. self in consumers' behavior.