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Personal taste and family face: Luxury consumption in Confucian and western societies
1K
Citations
48
References
1998
Year
LuxurySoutheast AsianEast Asian StudiesConsumer ResearchBrand StrategyConsumer AttitudePopular CultureCultural StudiesConsumer CultureFamily FaceManagementCommodificationCultural HistoryBrand BuildingLuxury BrandingBrand ManagementMaterial CultureSelf-concept TheoryIntercultural MarketingConsumerismBrand DevelopmentCultural ImpactConsumption SystemMarketingCultureKorean Popular CulturePersonal TasteLuxury ConsumptionAnthropologyArtsEast AsiaSocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
East Asia is the largest market for Western luxury and prestige brands, and existing theories link materialism and conspicuous consumption to this trend. This article examines the cultural factors behind this phenomenon and explores how luxury consumption differs between Southeast Asian and Western cultures. The authors review and integrate self‑concept theory into a cross‑cultural consumption model. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
East Asia is currently the biggest market for luxury and prestige brands from the West. This article examines the cultural factors that lie behind this phenomenon and, based on distinctions between Southeast Asian and Western cultures, explores how the practice of luxury consumption differs in these cultures. As part of this examination, self-concept theory is reviewed and integrated in a cross-cultural consumption model. Conceptual linkages between existing theories of materialism and conspicuous consumption are noted. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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