Figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound.

No === In her recent publication, Haraway (Haraway, D., (2003). The companion species manifesto: dogs, people, and significant otherness. Chicago, Prickly Paradigm Press.) extends her concept of the cyborg to explore how the figure of ¿companion species¿ can rethink the models of reality that tradit...

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Main Authors: Bettany, Shona M.M., Daly, R.
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3818
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-38182019-08-31T03:02:15Z Figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound. Bettany, Shona M.M. Daly, R. Consumption Post-human Ontology Pets No In her recent publication, Haraway (Haraway, D., (2003). The companion species manifesto: dogs, people, and significant otherness. Chicago, Prickly Paradigm Press.) extends her concept of the cyborg to explore how the figure of ¿companion species¿ can rethink the models of reality that traditionally underpin cultural research. This paper investigates the kind of consumption worlds and consumption relations the ontology of companion species suggests and what it offers in terms of understanding consumption in a post-human (and post-canine) consumer-behavior landscape. Following this, it proposes the concept of ¿companion-species consumption¿ (CSC) as a new ontology to extend interpretive research on consumers and their pets (Hirschman, E. C., (1994). Consumers and their animal companions. J Consum Res, 20 (3), 616¿632.; Holbrook, M.B., Stephens, D.L., Day, E., Holbrook, S.M. and Strazar, G., (2001). A collective stereographic photo essay on key aspects of animal companionship: the truth about dogs and cats. Academy of Marketing Science Review 1; AMS.; Belk, Russell W., (1996). Metaphoric relationships with pets Society & Animals: Social Scientific Studies of the Human Experience of Other Animals, vol. 4 (2), 121¿145.) and to reflect current theory of the consumer¿object relation. This research explores the potential of CSC through multi-site ethnography (Marcus, George E., (1995). Ethnography in/of the world system: the emergence of multi-sited ethnography, Annu Rev Anthropol 95¿117.) of a trans-national, highly-networked community of Afghan hounds and their exhibitors. The paper examines how companion species emerge across a range of cultural sites and documents the consumption practices stemming from the dichotomies between them. The conclusions inform dog-related marketing activity, advance consumer-research insights into the practices of dog-related avocational consumer groups, and extend existing theory of the consumer¿object relation. 2009-11-02T13:36:25Z 2009-11-02T13:36:25Z 2009-11-02T13:36:25Z Article No full-text available in the repository Bettany, S. and Daly, R. (2008). Figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound. Journal of Business Research. Vol. 61, No. 5, pp. 408-418. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3818 en http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2006.08.010
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Consumption
Post-human
Ontology
Pets
spellingShingle Consumption
Post-human
Ontology
Pets
Bettany, Shona M.M.
Daly, R.
Figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound.
description No === In her recent publication, Haraway (Haraway, D., (2003). The companion species manifesto: dogs, people, and significant otherness. Chicago, Prickly Paradigm Press.) extends her concept of the cyborg to explore how the figure of ¿companion species¿ can rethink the models of reality that traditionally underpin cultural research. This paper investigates the kind of consumption worlds and consumption relations the ontology of companion species suggests and what it offers in terms of understanding consumption in a post-human (and post-canine) consumer-behavior landscape. Following this, it proposes the concept of ¿companion-species consumption¿ (CSC) as a new ontology to extend interpretive research on consumers and their pets (Hirschman, E. C., (1994). Consumers and their animal companions. J Consum Res, 20 (3), 616¿632.; Holbrook, M.B., Stephens, D.L., Day, E., Holbrook, S.M. and Strazar, G., (2001). A collective stereographic photo essay on key aspects of animal companionship: the truth about dogs and cats. Academy of Marketing Science Review 1; AMS.; Belk, Russell W., (1996). Metaphoric relationships with pets Society & Animals: Social Scientific Studies of the Human Experience of Other Animals, vol. 4 (2), 121¿145.) and to reflect current theory of the consumer¿object relation. This research explores the potential of CSC through multi-site ethnography (Marcus, George E., (1995). Ethnography in/of the world system: the emergence of multi-sited ethnography, Annu Rev Anthropol 95¿117.) of a trans-national, highly-networked community of Afghan hounds and their exhibitors. The paper examines how companion species emerge across a range of cultural sites and documents the consumption practices stemming from the dichotomies between them. The conclusions inform dog-related marketing activity, advance consumer-research insights into the practices of dog-related avocational consumer groups, and extend existing theory of the consumer¿object relation.
author Bettany, Shona M.M.
Daly, R.
author_facet Bettany, Shona M.M.
Daly, R.
author_sort Bettany, Shona M.M.
title Figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound.
title_short Figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound.
title_full Figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound.
title_fullStr Figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound.
title_full_unstemmed Figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine Afghan hound.
title_sort figuring companion species consumption: a multi-site ethnography of the post-canine afghan hound.
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3818
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