The influence of gender roles in the drivers of luxury consumption for women: Insights from the gulf region
The influence of gender roles in the drivers of luxury consumption for women: Insights from the gulf region
Luxury consumption is a complex phenomenon that has been shown to convey prestige, signal wealth, boost self-esteem, and express self-concept and identity. Many of the earlier studies have been conducted in Western societies, and lack a detailed understanding of how culture and demographics such as gender may influence such consumption. In this exploratory study, we unravel the complexity further, and explore the drivers of luxury consumption among Gulf Arab women. Utilizing focus groups comprising 31 Gulf Arab females, we gain a deeper understanding of luxury consumption and evaluate the respective drivers in this context. Grounded in social role theory, we find a striking contrast between our results and the drivers of Gulf Arab female luxury consumers as predicted by extant theory. Specifically, Gulf Arab women displayed a number of independent and agentic behaviors in their luxury consumption, which contrasts to their social role in the Gulf Arab society that is often more communal and interdependent. We suggest a number of theoretical and practical implications from our study
165-175
Semaan, Rania W.
3f701768-cefa-480f-be4c-9e6d1c0eb343
Lindsay, Val
8271168c-281b-41cc-b72c-ec9a70d36fab
Williams, Paul
ae414ef5-40ec-4cd6-a79e-97c72343d781
Ashill, Nick
15254e54-2328-489e-81f2-82af2ccb8711
1 November 2019
Semaan, Rania W.
3f701768-cefa-480f-be4c-9e6d1c0eb343
Lindsay, Val
8271168c-281b-41cc-b72c-ec9a70d36fab
Williams, Paul
ae414ef5-40ec-4cd6-a79e-97c72343d781
Ashill, Nick
15254e54-2328-489e-81f2-82af2ccb8711
Semaan, Rania W., Lindsay, Val, Williams, Paul and Ashill, Nick
(2019)
The influence of gender roles in the drivers of luxury consumption for women: Insights from the gulf region.
Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services, 51 (11), .
(doi:10.1016/j.jretconser.2019.06.006).
Abstract
Luxury consumption is a complex phenomenon that has been shown to convey prestige, signal wealth, boost self-esteem, and express self-concept and identity. Many of the earlier studies have been conducted in Western societies, and lack a detailed understanding of how culture and demographics such as gender may influence such consumption. In this exploratory study, we unravel the complexity further, and explore the drivers of luxury consumption among Gulf Arab women. Utilizing focus groups comprising 31 Gulf Arab females, we gain a deeper understanding of luxury consumption and evaluate the respective drivers in this context. Grounded in social role theory, we find a striking contrast between our results and the drivers of Gulf Arab female luxury consumers as predicted by extant theory. Specifically, Gulf Arab women displayed a number of independent and agentic behaviors in their luxury consumption, which contrasts to their social role in the Gulf Arab society that is often more communal and interdependent. We suggest a number of theoretical and practical implications from our study
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 June 2019
Published date: 1 November 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 472643
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472643
ISSN: 0969-6989
PURE UUID: 3fa27f25-e9f6-4488-85a1-a2b449519b36
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Date deposited: 12 Dec 2022 18:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:02
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Author:
Rania W. Semaan
Author:
Val Lindsay
Author:
Nick Ashill
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