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The institutional foundation of materialism in western societies

journal contribution
posted on 2009-09-01, 00:00 authored by W Kilbourne, M Dorsch, P McDonagh, B Urien, A Prothero, M Grunhagen, Michael PolonskyMichael Polonsky, D Marshall, J Foley, A Bradshaw
Studies of materialism have increased in recent years, and most of these studies examine various aspects of materialism including its individual or social consequences. However, understanding, and possibly shaping, a society’s materialistic tendencies requires a more complete study of the relationship between a society’s institutional patterns and the acceptance of materialism by its members. Consequently, the current study examines five of the institutional antecedents of materialism to understand better how and why it develops as a mode of consumption within a society. More specifically, a model relating materialism and a set of institutionalized patterns of social behavior referred to as the dominant social paradigm was developed and tested in a study of seven industrial, market-based countries. The results suggest that the economic, technological, political, anthropocentric, and competition institutions making up the dominant social paradigm are all positively related to materialism. The implications of the relationship are then discussed.

History

Journal

Journal of macromarketing

Volume

29

Issue

3

Pagination

259 - 278

Publisher

Sage Publications

Location

Thousand Oaks, Calif.

ISSN

0276-1467

eISSN

1552-6534

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, SAGE Publications

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