The Second Annual ACR Film Festival (2004)
Citations
1125 | Modernity and self-identity: Self and society in the late modern age - Giddens - 1991 |
551 | Consumers and their Brands: Developing Relationship Theory in - Fournier - 1998 |
176 | Why do Brands Cause Trouble? A Dialectical Theory of Consumer Culture and Branding,” - Holt - 2002 |
165 | The Individualized Society - Bauman - 2001 |
152 | How consumers consume: a typology of consumption practices. - Holt - 1995 |
79 | Alternative measurement approaches to consumer values: the list of values (LOV) and values and life style (VALS). - Kahle, Beatty, et al. - 1986 |
74 | Poststructuralist lifestyle analysis: Conceptualizing the social patterning of consumption in postmodernity. - Holt - 1997 |
64 | The sacred and the profane in consumer behavior: Theodicy on the odyssey. - Belk, Wallendorf, et al. - 1989 |
38 | The politics of Consumption: A ReInquiry on Thompson and Haytko’s - Murray - 2002 |
33 | Consumer Behavior – A European Perspective, 2nd edition. Upper Saddle River, - Solomon, Bamossy, et al. - 2002 |
14 | The Stranger, - Camus - 1988 |
13 | Bodies of inscription: A cultural history of the modern tattoo community, - DeMello - 2000 |
13 | Revitalizing the Critical Imagination: Unleashing the Crouched Tiger,” - Murray, Ozanne, et al. - 1994 |
9 |
The lads: Masculinity and the new consumption of football.
- King
- 1997
(Show Context)
Citation Context ...s (1995) study on the consumption behavior of baseball supporters is the seminal work in this field. Based on an interpretive in-depth investigation of baseball supporters of Chicago, he developed a typology of four streams of consumption: consumption as experience, consumption as integration, consumption as classification and consumption as play. Other papers have been written on more specific aspects of sport behavior (Branscombe & Wann, 1992; Wann & Schrader, 2000). However, the thrust of this literature has focused on a sociological interpretation of sport consumption (e.g. Guttman, 1978; King, 1997). This video results from an effort to consider all possible sources in understanding the consumption of material possessions by soccer fans in a naturalistic interpretive perspective. We immersed ourselves in the football fan subculture in order to gain a better insight into the reasons and motives why people buy and consume football-related tangibles within and outside stadiums on game days and on other occasions. How and why fans come to buy those items? Where, when and how do they consume them? What are the motives for such a consumption? What are the values conferred to those items? This ... |
8 |
Controllability and stability in the self-serving attributions of sport spectators.
- Wann, Schrader
- 2000
(Show Context)
Citation Context ... it intensively by attending most of its matches. The general interest in sport consumption is recent in consumer research. More than any other, Holt’s (1995) study on the consumption behavior of baseball supporters is the seminal work in this field. Based on an interpretive in-depth investigation of baseball supporters of Chicago, he developed a typology of four streams of consumption: consumption as experience, consumption as integration, consumption as classification and consumption as play. Other papers have been written on more specific aspects of sport behavior (Branscombe & Wann, 1992; Wann & Schrader, 2000). However, the thrust of this literature has focused on a sociological interpretation of sport consumption (e.g. Guttman, 1978; King, 1997). This video results from an effort to consider all possible sources in understanding the consumption of material possessions by soccer fans in a naturalistic interpretive perspective. We immersed ourselves in the football fan subculture in order to gain a better insight into the reasons and motives why people buy and consume football-related tangibles within and outside stadiums on game days and on other occasions. How and why fans come to buy those items?... |
6 |
Role of identification with a group, arousal, categorization processes, and self-esteem in sports spectator aggression.
- Branscombe, Wann
- 1992
(Show Context)
Citation Context ...n their team, who support it intensively by attending most of its matches. The general interest in sport consumption is recent in consumer research. More than any other, Holt’s (1995) study on the consumption behavior of baseball supporters is the seminal work in this field. Based on an interpretive in-depth investigation of baseball supporters of Chicago, he developed a typology of four streams of consumption: consumption as experience, consumption as integration, consumption as classification and consumption as play. Other papers have been written on more specific aspects of sport behavior (Branscombe & Wann, 1992; Wann & Schrader, 2000). However, the thrust of this literature has focused on a sociological interpretation of sport consumption (e.g. Guttman, 1978; King, 1997). This video results from an effort to consider all possible sources in understanding the consumption of material possessions by soccer fans in a naturalistic interpretive perspective. We immersed ourselves in the football fan subculture in order to gain a better insight into the reasons and motives why people buy and consume football-related tangibles within and outside stadiums on game days and on other occasions. How and why fans ... |
5 |
From ritual to record: The nature of modern sports.
- Guttman
- 1978
(Show Context)
Citation Context ...ny other, Holt’s (1995) study on the consumption behavior of baseball supporters is the seminal work in this field. Based on an interpretive in-depth investigation of baseball supporters of Chicago, he developed a typology of four streams of consumption: consumption as experience, consumption as integration, consumption as classification and consumption as play. Other papers have been written on more specific aspects of sport behavior (Branscombe & Wann, 1992; Wann & Schrader, 2000). However, the thrust of this literature has focused on a sociological interpretation of sport consumption (e.g. Guttman, 1978; King, 1997). This video results from an effort to consider all possible sources in understanding the consumption of material possessions by soccer fans in a naturalistic interpretive perspective. We immersed ourselves in the football fan subculture in order to gain a better insight into the reasons and motives why people buy and consume football-related tangibles within and outside stadiums on game days and on other occasions. How and why fans come to buy those items? Where, when and how do they consume them? What are the motives for such a consumption? What are the values conferred to those... |
4 | Colors and scarves: The symbolic consumption of material possessions by soccer fans. - Derbaix, Decrop, et al. - 2001 |
3 | Out of the Closet and Out on the Street!: - Kates - 2000 |
3 | Brand Bricolage: The History, Semiosis and Phenomenology of Consumption Subcultures” - Ritson - 1999 |
2 | Lifestyle and Consumer Culture,” Theory, - Featherstone - 1987 |
2 | Culture and Consumption: A Theoretical Account of the - McCracken - 1986 |
2 | The Concept of Lifestyle: - Veal - 1993 |
1 | The Nature of Individual Values, - Rokeach - 1973 |