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Home culture consumption as ambivalent embodied experience

Angela Gracia B. Cruz (Department of Marketing, Monash Business School, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia)
Margo Buchanan-Oliver (Department of Marketing, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand)

European Journal of Marketing

ISSN: 0309-0566

Article publication date: 15 May 2020

Issue publication date: 10 June 2020

925

Abstract

Purpose

The consumer acculturation literature argues that reconstituting familiar embodied practices from the culture of origin leads to a comforting sense of home for consumers who move from one cultural context to another. This paper aims to extend this thesis by examining further dimensions in migrant consumers’ experiences of home culture consumption.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper analyses data gathered through multi-modal depth interviews with Southeast Asian skilled migrants in New Zealand through the conceptual lens of embodiment.

Findings

Building on Dion et al.’s (2011) framework of ethnic embodiment, the analysis uncovers home culture consumption as multi-layered experiences of anchoring, de-stabilisation and estrangement, characterised by convergence and divergence between the embodied dimensions of being-in-the-world, being-in-the-world with others and remembering being-in-the-world.

Research limitations/implications

This paper underscores home culture consumption in migration as an ambivalent embodied experience. Further research should investigate how other types of acculturating consumers experience and negotiate the changing meanings of home.

Practical implications

Marketers in migrant-receiving and migrant-sending cultural contexts should be sensitised to disjunctures in migrants’ embodied experience of consuming home and their role in heightening or mitigating these disjunctures.

Originality/value

This paper helps contribute to consumer acculturation theory in two ways. First, the authors show how migrants experience not only comfort and connection but also displacement, in practices of home culture consumption. Second, the authors show how migrant communities do not only encourage cultural maintenance and gatekeeping but also contribute to cultural identity de-stabilisation.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This article is dedicated to the memory of Professor Margo Buchanan-Oliver: co-author extraordinaire, caring mentor, dear friend, and dedicated enlarger of thought and philosophy in our field.

Citation

Cruz, A.G.B. and Buchanan-Oliver, M. (2020), "Home culture consumption as ambivalent embodied experience", European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 54 No. 6, pp. 1325-1353. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJM-02-2018-0081

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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