Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Using multimethod data, we investigate retirement as a life stage centered on consumption, where cultural scripts are particularly contested and in flux and where we witness an increase in breadth and depth of identity-related consumption, which we term consumer identity renaissance. While prior research on older consumers focuses on corporeal and cognitive decline and its impact on individual decision-making situations, our attention is drawn to the competency and growth potential of those who have exited their formal productive stage and privilege consumption as a means to create and enact identity. Contrary to the received view of older consumers simply reviewing and integrating their already developed identities, we find retirement can be a time of extensive identity work with multiple revived and emergent inspirations weaving across all time orientations (past, present, and fu-ture) and involving intricate consumption enactments. What inspires Billy Dodd, a retired baker, to buy prop-erty in a remote area of Florida, build an observatory with telescopes and cameras trained on the stars, and ulti-mately start an amateur astronomy community on the Gulf
Schau et al. (Tue,) studied this question.