Journal of Consumer Research
Volume 42, Issue 1, 2015, Pages 109-129

Indigenes’ responses to immigrants’ consumer acculturation: A relational configuration analysis (Article)

Luedicke M.K.*
  • a Cass Business School, City University London, 106 Bunhill Row, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

Consumer research commonly conceptualizes consumer acculturation as a project that immigrants pursue when adjusting their consumer identities and practices to unfamiliar sociocultural environments. This article broadens this prevailing view by conceptualizing consumer acculturation as a relational, interactive adaptation process that involves not only immigrant consumption practices but also indigenes who interpret and adjust to these practices, thereby shaping the paths of possibility for mutual adaptation. Based on a Fiskenian relational configuration analysis, the study shows how indigenes in a rural European town interpret certain immigrant consumption practices as manifestations of a gradual sell-out of the indigenous community, a crumbling of their authority, a violation of equality rules, and of indigenes being torn between contradictory micro- and macro-social morals. The article contributes a broader conceptualization of consumer acculturation, highlights four sources of ethnic group conflict in a consumer acculturation context, and demonstrates the epistemic value of Fiskenian relational configuration analysis for consumer culture theory. © 2015 The Author.

Author Keywords

Migration Consumer acculturation Consumer relationships Ethnic group conflict discrimination Ethnicity Racism

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84936741694&doi=10.1093%2fjcr%2fucv002&partnerID=40&md5=adc1d3edf4ac223942b7ad8f1a704897

DOI: 10.1093/jcr/ucv002
ISSN: 00935301
Cited by: 34
Original Language: English