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Marketing and consumer researchers have taken an increasing interest in the prevalence of and possibilities for enlightened consumerism. Contemporary studies show us, though, that ethically concerned consumers rarely act on their concerns – instead they act as if they were unenlightened about the negative effects of their consumption. The paper advances a theory for this contradiction that draws on Marx’s work on commodity fetishism and Freud’s analysis of sexual fetishism. In an attempt to reconcile the structural contexts of contemporary consumption with the psychic structures of the consuming subject proposed by each theorist, the paper concludes that narcissism, rather than fetishism, offers an explanation of this as if moment of contemporary consumption.
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Robert Cluley
Stephen Dunne
Marketing Theory
University of Nottingham
University of Leicester
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Cluley et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a09638d16dfdfe7ed340c32 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1470593112451395