Teorik Makale
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The Three-Tier Cycle: A Multidimensional Framework for Consumer Culture Research

Yıl 2024, Cilt: 17 Sayı: 3, 801 - 824, 26.09.2024

Öz

This paper synthesizes the notions of agency, assemblage, and practice as explorative lenses in a research framework for the use of consumer research which adopts a complexity standpoint on cultures and markets. The three-tier cycle is proposed as a contribution to the theoretical grounds of consumer culture research, supplying an extension to the interpretative investigation toolbox. The proposed framework enables better navigation for future studies that focus on understanding relational processes manifesting through consumption and market-related phenomena. To this end, the introduced approach can guide studies toward grasping the co-creative interactions in postmodern culture in flux, from a multidimensional perspective. This paper therefore provides operational guidelines for contemporary consumer culture research that will employ complexity theories.

Destekleyen Kurum

This conceptual paper is based on the theorethical frame of a master's degree thesis project supported by the İzmir University of Economics (İzmir Ekonomi Üniversitesi BAP Fonu).

Kaynakça

  • Atik, D., and Ozdamar Ertekin, Z. (2011). Children’s perception of food and healthy eating: dynamics behind their food preferences. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 37(1):59-65.
  • Alasuutari, P. (2010). The rise and relevance of qualitative research. International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 13(2): 139-155.
  • Allana, S. and Clark, A. (2018). Applying Meta-Theory to Qualitative and Mixed-Methods Research: A Discussion of Critical Realism and Heart Failure Disease Management Interventions Research. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 17:1-9.
  • Anderson, S., Tonner, A., and Hamilton, K. (2017). Death of buildings in consumer culture: natural death, architectural murder and cultural rape. Consumption Markets & Culture, 20(5): 387-402.
  • Antczak, K. A. and Beaudry, M.C. (2019). Assemblages of practice A conceptual framework for exploring human-thing relations in archaeology. Archaeological Dialogues, 26: 87-110.
  • Arnould, E. J. and Thompson, C. J. (2018). Consumer Culture Theory. Sage Publications.
  • Arsel Z (2017). Asking Questions with Reflexive Focus: A Tutorial on Designing and Conducting Interviews. Journal of Consumer Research 44(4):939-948.
  • Askegaard, S. and Linnet, J. T. (2011). Towards an epistemology of consumer culture theory: Phenomenology and the context of context. Marketing Theory, 11(4): 381-404.
  • Askegaard, S. and Scott, L. (2013). Consumer culture theory: The ironies of history. Marketing Theory, 13(2): 139-147.
  • Baker, U. (2009). Yüzeybilim Fragmanlar. Berensel E (comp.) İletişim Yayınları.
  • Baker, U. (2014a). Sanat ve Arzu. Açık T (ed.) İletişim Yayınları.
  • Baker, U. (2014b). Beyin Ekran. Berensel E (comp.) İletişim Yayınları.
  • Barad, K. (2014). Diffracting diffraction: Cutting together-apart. Parallax, 20(3): 168-187.
  • Belk, R. W. (1988). Possessions and the extended self. Journal of Consumer Research, 15(2): 139-168.
  • Belk, R., and Sobh, R. (2019). No assemblage required: On pursuing original consumer culture theory. Marketing Theory, 19(4):489-507.
  • Belk, R.W., Fischer, E., and Kozinets, R.V. (2013). Qualitative Consumer & Marketing Research. Sage Publications.
  • Borgerson, J. (2005). Materiality, Agency, and the Constitution of Consuming Subjects: Insights For Consumer Research. Menon G and Rao AR (eds.) Advances in Consumer Research Volume 32. Association of Consumer Research.
  • Bowden, S. (2014). Willing the Event. Critical Horizons, 15(3): 231-248.
  • Canniford, R. (2012). Poetic witness: Marketplace research through poetic transcription and poetic translation. Marketing Theory, 12(4): 391-409.
  • Canniford, R. and Shankar, A. (2013). Purifying Practices: How Consumers Assemble Romantic Experiences of Nature. Journal of Consumer Research, 39(5):1051-1069.
  • Canniford, R. and Bajde, D. (2015). Assembling Consumption: Researching actors, networks and markets. Routledge.
  • Cavusoglu, L. and Belk, R.W. (2024). How to make a collaborative videography using Phygital affordances to study sensitive topics, Qualitative Market Research [online first].
  • Cheetham, F., McEachern, M. G., and Warnaby, G. (2018). A kaleidoscopic view of the territorialized consumption of place. Marketing Theory, 18(4): 473-492.
  • Coleman, R. and Ringrose, J. (2013). Introduction: Deleuze and Research Methodologies. Coleman Rand Ringrose J (eds.) Deleuze and Research Methodologies. Edinburgh University Press.
  • DeLanda, M. (1997). A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History. Swerve Editions.
  • DeLanda, M. (2006). A New Philosophy of Society: Assemblage Theory and Social Complexity. Bloomsbury Publishing.
  • DeLanda, M. (2016). Assemblage Theory. Edinburgh University Press.
  • Deleuze, G. (1990). The Logic of Sense. Columbia University Press.
  • Deleuze, G. and Guattari, F. (1987). A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia. University of Minneapolis Press.
  • Diaz Ruiz, C. A., Penaloza, L., and Holmqvist, J. (2020). Assembling tribes: An assemblage thinking approach to the dynamics of ephemerality within consumer tribes. European Journal of Marketing, 54(5): 999-1024.
  • Dolbec, P-Y., Fischer, E., and Canniford, R. (2021). Something old, something new: Enabled theory building in qualitative marketing research. Marketing Theory, 21(4): 443-461.
  • Dolphin, R. and Van Der Tuin, I. (2012). Interview with Manuel DeLanda. New Materialism: Cartographies & Interview. Open Humanities Press, MPublishing.
  • Dovey, K., Rao, F., and Pafka, E. (2018). Agglomeration and assemblage: Deterritorialising urban theory. Urban Studies, 55(2): 263-273.
  • Elder-Vass, D., (2007). A Method for Social Ontology. Journal of Critical Realism, 6(2): 226-24.
  • Elder-Vass, D. (2017). Material Parts in Social Structure. Journal of Social Ontology, 3(1): 89-105.
  • Fernandez, K. V. (2015). Of Gates and Doors: A Critical Reflection on Agency. Thyroff AE, Murray JB, and Belk R (eds.) Consumer Culture Theory. Emerald.
  • Fırat, F. A. and Dholakia, N. (2017). The Consumer Culture Theory Movement: Critique and Renewal. Sherry JF and Fischer E (eds.) Contemporary Consumer Culture Theory. Routledge.
  • Franco, P., Canniford, R., and Phipps, M. (2022). Object-oriented marketing theory. Marketing Theory, 22(3): 401-420.
  • Giesler, M. and Fischer, E. (2017). Market system dynamics. Marketing Theory, 17(1) :3-8.
  • Giesler, M. and Thompson, C. J. (2016). Process Theorization in Cultural Consumer Research. Journal of Consumer Research, 43(4) :497-508.
  • Ginzburg, C. (1993). Microhistory: Two or Three Things. Tedeschi AN (trans.) Critical Inquiry, 20: 10-35.
  • Heley, J., Welsh, M., and Saville, S. (2019). The fanta-sy of global products: fizzy-drinks, differentiated ubiquity and the placing of globalization. Globalizations.
  • Hewer, P. (2022) Reimagining the terrain of liquid times: Reflexive marketing and the sociological imagination. Journal of Consumer Culture, 22(2): 293-310.
  • Huff, A. D., Humpreys, A., and Wilner, S. J. S. (2021). The Politicization of Objects: Meaning and Materiality in The U.S. Cannabis Market. Journal of Consumer Research, 48: 22-50.
  • Hui, A., Schatzki, T., and Shove, E. (2017). The Nexus of Practices: Connections, constellations, practitioners. Routledge.
  • Jaakkola, E. (2020). Designing conceptual articles: four approaches. AMS Review, 10: 18-26.
  • Karababa, E. and Ger, G. (2011). Early Modern Ottoman Coffeehouse Culture and the Formation of the Consumer Subject. Journal of Consumer Research, 37(5): 737-760.
  • Koro-Ljungberg, M. and Barko, T. (2012). “Answers”, Assemblages, and Qualitative Research. Qualitative Inquiry, 18(3): 256-265.
  • Kravets, O. and Karababa, E. (2022). Ripping through a storified place: an exercise in critical breaking. Journal of Marketing Management, 38(15-16):1672-1690.
  • Levi, G. (1992). On Microhistory. Burke P (ed.) New Perspectives on Historical Writing. Pennsylvania State University Press.
  • Lucarelli, A. and Giovanardi, M. (2019). Investigating Relational Ontologies in Macromarketing: Toward a Relational Approach and Research Agenda. Journal of Macromarketing, 39(1): 88-102.
  • Mello, R. R., Almeida S. O., and Dalmoro, M. (2021). The emperor’s new cosplay: the agency of an absent material on the consumption experience. Consumption Markets & Culture, 24(3): 241-261.
  • Parmienter, M. and Fischer, E. (2015). Things Fall Apart: The Dynamics of Brand Audience Dissipation. Journal of Consumer Research, 41: 1228-1251.
  • Presi, C., Maehle, N. and Kleppe, I. A. (2016). Brand selfies: consumer experiences and marketplace conversations. European Journal of Marketing, 50(9-10):1814-1834.
  • Price, L. L. and Coulter, R. A. (2019). Crossing Bridges: Assembling Culture into Brands and Brands into Consumers’ Global Local Cultural Lives. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 29(3): 547-554.
  • Reckwitz, A. (2002). Toward a Theory of Social Practices: A Development in Culturalist Theorizing. European Journal of Social Theory, 5(2): 243-63.
  • Reckwitz, A. (2017). Practices and their affects. Hui A, Schatzki T, and Shove E (eds.) The Nexus of Practices: Connections, constellations, practitioners. Taylor & Francis.
  • Rokka, J. (2010). Netnographic inquiry and new translocal sites of the social. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 34(4): 367-492.
  • Rokka, J. (2021). Consumer Culture Theory’s future in marketing. Journal of Marketing Theory and Practice, 29(1): 114-124.
  • Rutzou, T. and Elder-Vass, D. (2019). On Assemblages and Things: Fluidity, Stability, Causation Stories, and Formation Stories. Sociological Theory, 37(4): 401-424.
  • Sandikci, O. and Kravets, O. (2019). CCT Perspectives on Macromarketing: Introduction to the Special Issue. Journal of Macromarketing, 39(1): 5-8.
  • Schatzki, T. D. (2016). Practice Theory as Flat Ontology. Spaargaren G, Weenink D, and Lamers M (eds.) Practice Theory and Research: Exploring the Dynamics of Social Life. Routledge.
  • Schatzki, T. R. (2000). Introduction. Schatzki TR, Cetina KK, and Von Savigny E (eds.) The Practice Turn in Contemporary Theory. Taylor & Francis.
  • Schatzki, T. R. (2010). Materiality and Social Life. Nature and Culture, 5(2).
  • Schatzki, T. R. (2011). “Where the Action Is (On Large Social Phenomena Such as Sociotechnical Regimes)” [working paper].
  • Schatzki, T. R. (1996). Social Practices: A Wittgensteinian Approach to Human Activity and the Social. Cambridge University Press.
  • Schöps, J. D., Kogler, S., and Hemetsberger, A. (2019). (De-)stabilizing the digitized fashion market on Instagram-dynamics of visual performative assemblages. Consumption Markets & Culture.
  • Scott, K., Martin, D., and Schouten, J. W. (2014). Marketing and the New Materialism. Journal of Macromarketing, 34(3): 282-290.
  • Skålén, P., Cova, B., Gummerus, J., and Sihvonen, A. (2022). Marketing-as-practice: A framework and research agenda for value-creating marketing activity. Marketing Theory [online first].
  • Smith, B. and Monforte, J. (2020). Stories, new materialism and pluralism: Understanding, practicing and pushing the boundaries of narrative analysis. Methods in Psychology, 2 100016.
  • Solulier, E. (2012). What Social Ontology for Social Web? An Assemblage Theory Promoted. WWW1012 Conference Workshop - PhiloWeb 2012: Web and Philosophy, Why and What For [proceedings].
  • Southerton. D. (2001). Consuming Kitchens: Taste, context and identity formation. Journal of Consumer Culture, 1(2): 179-203.
  • Souza-Leão, A. L. M. and Moura, B. M. (2022). Ongoing adoption of the assemblage theory inconsumer culture theory. Brazilian Journal of Marketing, 21(4):1360-1395.
  • Strengers, Y., Nicholls, L., and Maller, C. (2014). Curious energy consumers: Humans and nonhumans in assemblages of household practice. Journal of Consumer Culture, 16(3): 761-780.
  • Taştan, İ. and Ozdamar Ertekin, Z. (2024). Ideological capacities in consumer communities: an exploration of the “presenteers” tribe. Qualitative Market Research [online first].
  • Tsing, A. L. (2015). The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins. Princeton University Press.
  • Türe, M. and Ger, G. (2016). Continuity Through Change: Navigating Temporalities Through Heirloom Rejuvenation. Journal of Consumer Research, 46(1): 1-25.
  • Urry, J. (2005). The Complexities of the Global. Theory, Culture & Society, 22(5): 235-254.
  • Warde, A. (2005). Consumption and Theories of Practice. Journal of Consumer Culture, 5(2): 131-153.
  • Warde, A. (2014). After taste: Culture, consumption and theories of practice. Journal of Consumer Culture, 14(3): 279-303.
  • Weijo, H.A., Martin, D.A., and Arnould, E.J. (2018). Consumer Movements and Collective Creativity: The Case of Restaurant Day. Journal of Consumer Research, 45(2): 251–274.
  • Wilde, N. (2020). Burning Bridges: The problem of relations in object-oriented ontology - a topological approach. Humanities & Social Sciences Communication, 6(29): 1-12.
  • Williams, J. (2018). Assembling the water factory: seawater desalination and the technopolitics of water privatisation in the San Diego-Tijuana metropolitan region. Geoforum, 93: 32-39.
  • Woermann, N. (2017). Back to the roots! Methodological situationalism and the postmodern lesson for studying tribes, practices, and assemblages. Marketing Theory, 17(2): 149-163.
  • Woodward, I. (2011). Towards an object-relations theory of consumerism: The aesthetics of desire and the unfolding materiality of social life. Journal of Consumer Culture, 11(3): 366-384.
  • Venkatraman, R., Ozanne, J.L., and Coslor, E. (2024). Stigma Resistance through Body-in-Practice: Embodying Pride through Creative Mastery. Journal of Consumer Research [online first].
  • Zajc, M. (2015). Social media, prosumption, and dispositives: New mechanisms of the construction of subjectivity. Journal of Consumer Culture, 15(1): 38-47.

Üç Aşamalı Döngü: Tüketim Kültürü Araştırmalarına Yönelik Çokboyutlu Bir Çerçeve

Yıl 2024, Cilt: 17 Sayı: 3, 801 - 824, 26.09.2024

Öz

Bu makale kültürler ve pazarlar üzerinde karmaşıklık bakış açısını benimseyen tüketici araştırmalarının kullanımına yönelik bir araştırma çerçevesinde faillik, öbekleşme, ve uygulama kavramlarını keşfedici mercekler olarak sentezlemektedir. Bu kavramsal çalışma yoluyla tasarlanan üç aşamalı döngü, tüketici kültürü araştırmalarının teorik temellerine bir katkı olarak sunulmuştur. Önerilen çerçeve, tüketim ve pazarla ilgili olgular dolayısıyla gün yüzüne çıkan ilişkisel süreçlerin anlaşılmasına odaklanacak gelecekteki çalışmalar için daha iyi bir araştırma sürecini mümkün kılmaktadır. Bu amaçla sunulan yaklaşım, değişim halindeki postmodern kültürdeki ortak yaratıcı etkileşimleri çok boyutlu bir bakış açısından kavramaya yönelik çalışmalara yol gösterebilir. Bu nedenle bu makale, karmaşıklık teorilerini kullanacak çağdaş tüketim kültürü araştırmaları için verimli olabilecek yönergeler sunmaktadır.

Kaynakça

  • Atik, D., and Ozdamar Ertekin, Z. (2011). Children’s perception of food and healthy eating: dynamics behind their food preferences. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 37(1):59-65.
  • Alasuutari, P. (2010). The rise and relevance of qualitative research. International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 13(2): 139-155.
  • Allana, S. and Clark, A. (2018). Applying Meta-Theory to Qualitative and Mixed-Methods Research: A Discussion of Critical Realism and Heart Failure Disease Management Interventions Research. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 17:1-9.
  • Anderson, S., Tonner, A., and Hamilton, K. (2017). Death of buildings in consumer culture: natural death, architectural murder and cultural rape. Consumption Markets & Culture, 20(5): 387-402.
  • Antczak, K. A. and Beaudry, M.C. (2019). Assemblages of practice A conceptual framework for exploring human-thing relations in archaeology. Archaeological Dialogues, 26: 87-110.
  • Arnould, E. J. and Thompson, C. J. (2018). Consumer Culture Theory. Sage Publications.
  • Arsel Z (2017). Asking Questions with Reflexive Focus: A Tutorial on Designing and Conducting Interviews. Journal of Consumer Research 44(4):939-948.
  • Askegaard, S. and Linnet, J. T. (2011). Towards an epistemology of consumer culture theory: Phenomenology and the context of context. Marketing Theory, 11(4): 381-404.
  • Askegaard, S. and Scott, L. (2013). Consumer culture theory: The ironies of history. Marketing Theory, 13(2): 139-147.
  • Baker, U. (2009). Yüzeybilim Fragmanlar. Berensel E (comp.) İletişim Yayınları.
  • Baker, U. (2014a). Sanat ve Arzu. Açık T (ed.) İletişim Yayınları.
  • Baker, U. (2014b). Beyin Ekran. Berensel E (comp.) İletişim Yayınları.
  • Barad, K. (2014). Diffracting diffraction: Cutting together-apart. Parallax, 20(3): 168-187.
  • Belk, R. W. (1988). Possessions and the extended self. Journal of Consumer Research, 15(2): 139-168.
  • Belk, R., and Sobh, R. (2019). No assemblage required: On pursuing original consumer culture theory. Marketing Theory, 19(4):489-507.
  • Belk, R.W., Fischer, E., and Kozinets, R.V. (2013). Qualitative Consumer & Marketing Research. Sage Publications.
  • Borgerson, J. (2005). Materiality, Agency, and the Constitution of Consuming Subjects: Insights For Consumer Research. Menon G and Rao AR (eds.) Advances in Consumer Research Volume 32. Association of Consumer Research.
  • Bowden, S. (2014). Willing the Event. Critical Horizons, 15(3): 231-248.
  • Canniford, R. (2012). Poetic witness: Marketplace research through poetic transcription and poetic translation. Marketing Theory, 12(4): 391-409.
  • Canniford, R. and Shankar, A. (2013). Purifying Practices: How Consumers Assemble Romantic Experiences of Nature. Journal of Consumer Research, 39(5):1051-1069.
  • Canniford, R. and Bajde, D. (2015). Assembling Consumption: Researching actors, networks and markets. Routledge.
  • Cavusoglu, L. and Belk, R.W. (2024). How to make a collaborative videography using Phygital affordances to study sensitive topics, Qualitative Market Research [online first].
  • Cheetham, F., McEachern, M. G., and Warnaby, G. (2018). A kaleidoscopic view of the territorialized consumption of place. Marketing Theory, 18(4): 473-492.
  • Coleman, R. and Ringrose, J. (2013). Introduction: Deleuze and Research Methodologies. Coleman Rand Ringrose J (eds.) Deleuze and Research Methodologies. Edinburgh University Press.
  • DeLanda, M. (1997). A Thousand Years of Nonlinear History. Swerve Editions.
  • DeLanda, M. (2006). A New Philosophy of Society: Assemblage Theory and Social Complexity. Bloomsbury Publishing.
  • DeLanda, M. (2016). Assemblage Theory. Edinburgh University Press.
  • Deleuze, G. (1990). The Logic of Sense. Columbia University Press.
  • Deleuze, G. and Guattari, F. (1987). A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia. University of Minneapolis Press.
  • Diaz Ruiz, C. A., Penaloza, L., and Holmqvist, J. (2020). Assembling tribes: An assemblage thinking approach to the dynamics of ephemerality within consumer tribes. European Journal of Marketing, 54(5): 999-1024.
  • Dolbec, P-Y., Fischer, E., and Canniford, R. (2021). Something old, something new: Enabled theory building in qualitative marketing research. Marketing Theory, 21(4): 443-461.
  • Dolphin, R. and Van Der Tuin, I. (2012). Interview with Manuel DeLanda. New Materialism: Cartographies & Interview. Open Humanities Press, MPublishing.
  • Dovey, K., Rao, F., and Pafka, E. (2018). Agglomeration and assemblage: Deterritorialising urban theory. Urban Studies, 55(2): 263-273.
  • Elder-Vass, D., (2007). A Method for Social Ontology. Journal of Critical Realism, 6(2): 226-24.
  • Elder-Vass, D. (2017). Material Parts in Social Structure. Journal of Social Ontology, 3(1): 89-105.
  • Fernandez, K. V. (2015). Of Gates and Doors: A Critical Reflection on Agency. Thyroff AE, Murray JB, and Belk R (eds.) Consumer Culture Theory. Emerald.
  • Fırat, F. A. and Dholakia, N. (2017). The Consumer Culture Theory Movement: Critique and Renewal. Sherry JF and Fischer E (eds.) Contemporary Consumer Culture Theory. Routledge.
  • Franco, P., Canniford, R., and Phipps, M. (2022). Object-oriented marketing theory. Marketing Theory, 22(3): 401-420.
  • Giesler, M. and Fischer, E. (2017). Market system dynamics. Marketing Theory, 17(1) :3-8.
  • Giesler, M. and Thompson, C. J. (2016). Process Theorization in Cultural Consumer Research. Journal of Consumer Research, 43(4) :497-508.
  • Ginzburg, C. (1993). Microhistory: Two or Three Things. Tedeschi AN (trans.) Critical Inquiry, 20: 10-35.
  • Heley, J., Welsh, M., and Saville, S. (2019). The fanta-sy of global products: fizzy-drinks, differentiated ubiquity and the placing of globalization. Globalizations.
  • Hewer, P. (2022) Reimagining the terrain of liquid times: Reflexive marketing and the sociological imagination. Journal of Consumer Culture, 22(2): 293-310.
  • Huff, A. D., Humpreys, A., and Wilner, S. J. S. (2021). The Politicization of Objects: Meaning and Materiality in The U.S. Cannabis Market. Journal of Consumer Research, 48: 22-50.
  • Hui, A., Schatzki, T., and Shove, E. (2017). The Nexus of Practices: Connections, constellations, practitioners. Routledge.
  • Jaakkola, E. (2020). Designing conceptual articles: four approaches. AMS Review, 10: 18-26.
  • Karababa, E. and Ger, G. (2011). Early Modern Ottoman Coffeehouse Culture and the Formation of the Consumer Subject. Journal of Consumer Research, 37(5): 737-760.
  • Koro-Ljungberg, M. and Barko, T. (2012). “Answers”, Assemblages, and Qualitative Research. Qualitative Inquiry, 18(3): 256-265.
  • Kravets, O. and Karababa, E. (2022). Ripping through a storified place: an exercise in critical breaking. Journal of Marketing Management, 38(15-16):1672-1690.
  • Levi, G. (1992). On Microhistory. Burke P (ed.) New Perspectives on Historical Writing. Pennsylvania State University Press.
  • Lucarelli, A. and Giovanardi, M. (2019). Investigating Relational Ontologies in Macromarketing: Toward a Relational Approach and Research Agenda. Journal of Macromarketing, 39(1): 88-102.
  • Mello, R. R., Almeida S. O., and Dalmoro, M. (2021). The emperor’s new cosplay: the agency of an absent material on the consumption experience. Consumption Markets & Culture, 24(3): 241-261.
  • Parmienter, M. and Fischer, E. (2015). Things Fall Apart: The Dynamics of Brand Audience Dissipation. Journal of Consumer Research, 41: 1228-1251.
  • Presi, C., Maehle, N. and Kleppe, I. A. (2016). Brand selfies: consumer experiences and marketplace conversations. European Journal of Marketing, 50(9-10):1814-1834.
  • Price, L. L. and Coulter, R. A. (2019). Crossing Bridges: Assembling Culture into Brands and Brands into Consumers’ Global Local Cultural Lives. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 29(3): 547-554.
  • Reckwitz, A. (2002). Toward a Theory of Social Practices: A Development in Culturalist Theorizing. European Journal of Social Theory, 5(2): 243-63.
  • Reckwitz, A. (2017). Practices and their affects. Hui A, Schatzki T, and Shove E (eds.) The Nexus of Practices: Connections, constellations, practitioners. Taylor & Francis.
  • Rokka, J. (2010). Netnographic inquiry and new translocal sites of the social. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 34(4): 367-492.
  • Rokka, J. (2021). Consumer Culture Theory’s future in marketing. Journal of Marketing Theory and Practice, 29(1): 114-124.
  • Rutzou, T. and Elder-Vass, D. (2019). On Assemblages and Things: Fluidity, Stability, Causation Stories, and Formation Stories. Sociological Theory, 37(4): 401-424.
  • Sandikci, O. and Kravets, O. (2019). CCT Perspectives on Macromarketing: Introduction to the Special Issue. Journal of Macromarketing, 39(1): 5-8.
  • Schatzki, T. D. (2016). Practice Theory as Flat Ontology. Spaargaren G, Weenink D, and Lamers M (eds.) Practice Theory and Research: Exploring the Dynamics of Social Life. Routledge.
  • Schatzki, T. R. (2000). Introduction. Schatzki TR, Cetina KK, and Von Savigny E (eds.) The Practice Turn in Contemporary Theory. Taylor & Francis.
  • Schatzki, T. R. (2010). Materiality and Social Life. Nature and Culture, 5(2).
  • Schatzki, T. R. (2011). “Where the Action Is (On Large Social Phenomena Such as Sociotechnical Regimes)” [working paper].
  • Schatzki, T. R. (1996). Social Practices: A Wittgensteinian Approach to Human Activity and the Social. Cambridge University Press.
  • Schöps, J. D., Kogler, S., and Hemetsberger, A. (2019). (De-)stabilizing the digitized fashion market on Instagram-dynamics of visual performative assemblages. Consumption Markets & Culture.
  • Scott, K., Martin, D., and Schouten, J. W. (2014). Marketing and the New Materialism. Journal of Macromarketing, 34(3): 282-290.
  • Skålén, P., Cova, B., Gummerus, J., and Sihvonen, A. (2022). Marketing-as-practice: A framework and research agenda for value-creating marketing activity. Marketing Theory [online first].
  • Smith, B. and Monforte, J. (2020). Stories, new materialism and pluralism: Understanding, practicing and pushing the boundaries of narrative analysis. Methods in Psychology, 2 100016.
  • Solulier, E. (2012). What Social Ontology for Social Web? An Assemblage Theory Promoted. WWW1012 Conference Workshop - PhiloWeb 2012: Web and Philosophy, Why and What For [proceedings].
  • Southerton. D. (2001). Consuming Kitchens: Taste, context and identity formation. Journal of Consumer Culture, 1(2): 179-203.
  • Souza-Leão, A. L. M. and Moura, B. M. (2022). Ongoing adoption of the assemblage theory inconsumer culture theory. Brazilian Journal of Marketing, 21(4):1360-1395.
  • Strengers, Y., Nicholls, L., and Maller, C. (2014). Curious energy consumers: Humans and nonhumans in assemblages of household practice. Journal of Consumer Culture, 16(3): 761-780.
  • Taştan, İ. and Ozdamar Ertekin, Z. (2024). Ideological capacities in consumer communities: an exploration of the “presenteers” tribe. Qualitative Market Research [online first].
  • Tsing, A. L. (2015). The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins. Princeton University Press.
  • Türe, M. and Ger, G. (2016). Continuity Through Change: Navigating Temporalities Through Heirloom Rejuvenation. Journal of Consumer Research, 46(1): 1-25.
  • Urry, J. (2005). The Complexities of the Global. Theory, Culture & Society, 22(5): 235-254.
  • Warde, A. (2005). Consumption and Theories of Practice. Journal of Consumer Culture, 5(2): 131-153.
  • Warde, A. (2014). After taste: Culture, consumption and theories of practice. Journal of Consumer Culture, 14(3): 279-303.
  • Weijo, H.A., Martin, D.A., and Arnould, E.J. (2018). Consumer Movements and Collective Creativity: The Case of Restaurant Day. Journal of Consumer Research, 45(2): 251–274.
  • Wilde, N. (2020). Burning Bridges: The problem of relations in object-oriented ontology - a topological approach. Humanities & Social Sciences Communication, 6(29): 1-12.
  • Williams, J. (2018). Assembling the water factory: seawater desalination and the technopolitics of water privatisation in the San Diego-Tijuana metropolitan region. Geoforum, 93: 32-39.
  • Woermann, N. (2017). Back to the roots! Methodological situationalism and the postmodern lesson for studying tribes, practices, and assemblages. Marketing Theory, 17(2): 149-163.
  • Woodward, I. (2011). Towards an object-relations theory of consumerism: The aesthetics of desire and the unfolding materiality of social life. Journal of Consumer Culture, 11(3): 366-384.
  • Venkatraman, R., Ozanne, J.L., and Coslor, E. (2024). Stigma Resistance through Body-in-Practice: Embodying Pride through Creative Mastery. Journal of Consumer Research [online first].
  • Zajc, M. (2015). Social media, prosumption, and dispositives: New mechanisms of the construction of subjectivity. Journal of Consumer Culture, 15(1): 38-47.
Toplam 87 adet kaynakça vardır.

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil İngilizce
Konular Pazarlama (Diğer)
Bölüm Derlemeler
Yazarlar

İrem Taştan 0000-0001-9893-9953

Ebru Uzunoğlu 0000-0002-9715-8415

Yayımlanma Tarihi 26 Eylül 2024
Gönderilme Tarihi 7 Şubat 2024
Kabul Tarihi 3 Haziran 2024
Yayımlandığı Sayı Yıl 2024 Cilt: 17 Sayı: 3

Kaynak Göster

APA Taştan, İ., & Uzunoğlu, E. (2024). The Three-Tier Cycle: A Multidimensional Framework for Consumer Culture Research. Pazarlama Ve Pazarlama Araştırmaları Dergisi, 17(3), 801-824.