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Individual Consumer Identity Formation in a Politicised World

Hakobyan, Marine LU and Himmelsbach, Undine LU (2022) BUSN39 20221
Department of Business Administration
Abstract
Thesis Purpose: The purpose of this thesis is to gain an understanding of how consumers build their individual identities through everyday political acts of consumption.

Methodology & Empirical Data: This study is conducted based on a social constructionist worldview with a qualitative research design, adopting an inductive approach. The literature review and 19 semi-structured interviews jointly create the basis for discussion on the research question under study.

Theoretical Perspective: This thesis draws upon the three literature streams of consumer identity, political consumerism, and identity construction through everyday political consumerism. Based on these bodies of literature, relevant key concepts are identified to provide... (More)
Thesis Purpose: The purpose of this thesis is to gain an understanding of how consumers build their individual identities through everyday political acts of consumption.

Methodology & Empirical Data: This study is conducted based on a social constructionist worldview with a qualitative research design, adopting an inductive approach. The literature review and 19 semi-structured interviews jointly create the basis for discussion on the research question under study.

Theoretical Perspective: This thesis draws upon the three literature streams of consumer identity, political consumerism, and identity construction through everyday political consumerism. Based on these bodies of literature, relevant key concepts are identified to provide a theoretical basis for the conducted empirical research and its qualitative analysis.

Main Findings & Contributions: Three inseparable modes are identified, namely
motivations, inner conflicts, and identity negotiations, jointly showing the different ways of identity construction through everyday political consumerism as part of a complex and intertwined process.

Practical Implications: This study illuminates the so far only scarcely addressed invisible and subtle forms of political consumption practiced on a daily basis in connection to micro-level individual identities, providing implications for both scholars in consumer research and practitioners in marketing. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Hakobyan, Marine LU and Himmelsbach, Undine LU
supervisor
organization
course
BUSN39 20221
year
type
H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
subject
keywords
Identity Formation, Consumer Identity, Political Consumerism, Everyday Political Consumption, Consumer Resistance, Sustainable Consumption
language
English
id
9084332
date added to LUP
2022-06-28 09:54:50
date last changed
2022-06-28 09:54:50
@misc{9084332,
  abstract     = {{Thesis Purpose: The purpose of this thesis is to gain an understanding of how consumers build their individual identities through everyday political acts of consumption.

Methodology & Empirical Data: This study is conducted based on a social constructionist worldview with a qualitative research design, adopting an inductive approach. The literature review and 19 semi-structured interviews jointly create the basis for discussion on the research question under study.

Theoretical Perspective: This thesis draws upon the three literature streams of consumer identity, political consumerism, and identity construction through everyday political consumerism. Based on these bodies of literature, relevant key concepts are identified to provide a theoretical basis for the conducted empirical research and its qualitative analysis.

Main Findings & Contributions: Three inseparable modes are identified, namely
motivations, inner conflicts, and identity negotiations, jointly showing the different ways of identity construction through everyday political consumerism as part of a complex and intertwined process.

Practical Implications: This study illuminates the so far only scarcely addressed invisible and subtle forms of political consumption practiced on a daily basis in connection to micro-level individual identities, providing implications for both scholars in consumer research and practitioners in marketing.}},
  author       = {{Hakobyan, Marine and Himmelsbach, Undine}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Individual Consumer Identity Formation in a Politicised World}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}