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Consumer multiculturation: consequences of multi-cultural identification for brand knowledge
Authors:Eva Kipnis  Amanda J. Broderick  Catherine Demangeot
Affiliation:1. Coventry Business School, Coventry University, Coventry, UK;2. Salford Business School, University of Salford, Salford, UK;3. Department of Marketing, Strathclyde Business School, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK
Abstract:Whilst there has been a sustained interest in ethnic migrants developing composite cultural identities in emerged multi-cultural contexts, considerations of identity transitions among mainstream consumers (i.e. the non-migrant, locally born majority in a given marketplace) have been so far limited to the local–global culture dichotomy. This paper argues that, in multi-cultural marketplaces, mainstream consumers are exposed to a diverse range of local, global and foreign cultural meanings and may deploy these meanings for identity construal in a more complex manner. The paper offers a conceptual framework of consumer multiculturation that (a) includes foreign cultures as other discrete influences in multi-cultural marketplaces; (b) constructs a more coherent conception of how, through interaction with foreign, global and local cultures, mainstream consumers' identities may diversify beyond local/global/glocal alternatives and (c) considers the impact of these transitions on consumers' perceptions, expectations of and behavioral responses to culture-based brand meanings.
Keywords:multi-cultural identities  cultural diversity and consumption  consumer brand knowledge
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