Article

Resistance to Ritual Practice: Exploring Perceptions of Others

Details

Citation

Nuttall P & Tinson J (2011) Resistance to Ritual Practice: Exploring Perceptions of Others. European Journal of Marketing, 45 (11/12), pp. 1725-1735. https://doi.org/10.1108/03090561111167360

Abstract
Purpose: This paper contributes to the special issue theme by exploring the perceptions of anti-consumption and resistant practices of adolescents by their peer group in the context of high school prom attendance. Originality: Possible causes for avoiding consumption have been previously considered however, as yet unexplored are how those who do not consume are perceived by their peers and how this manifests itself in relation to group affiliation, attendees’ perception of ‘self’ and social norms. Methodology/Sampling: This paper employs a mixed methods approach involving 12 in-depth interviews with those who had attended a high school prom in the last three years and open questions on a survey to adolescents. Findings: Four main perceptions of non-attendance were identified: non-choice, risk aversion, passive disengagement and intentional disengagement. Perceptions of anti-consumption and resistance will have social implications for the non-attendee/s but the extent to which non-attendance is viewed negatively will also be moderated by existing social status of the non-attendee/s. Originality/value: Possible causes for avoiding consumption have been previously considered, however, as yet unexplored are how those who do not consume are perceived by their peers and how this manifests itself in relation to group affiliation, attendees' perception of "self" and social norms.

Keywords
Adolescents; Behaviour; Prom; Resistance; Peer Affiliation; Perception; Social groups; Consumption (Economics) Moral and ethical aspects; Social values.

Journal
European Journal of Marketing: Volume 45, Issue 11/12

StatusPublished
Publication date30/11/2011
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/9296
PublisherEmerald
ISSN0309-0566

People (1)

Professor Julie Tinson

Professor Julie Tinson

Professor of Marketing, Marketing & Retail

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