Global responsibility through consumption?: Resistance and assimilation in the anti-brand movement

Strategic Direction

ISSN: 0258-0543

Article publication date: 22 March 2011

242

Keywords

Citation

Fontenelle, I.A. (2011), "Global responsibility through consumption?: Resistance and assimilation in the anti-brand movement", Strategic Direction, Vol. 27 No. 4. https://doi.org/10.1108/sd.2011.05627dad.005

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Global responsibility through consumption?: Resistance and assimilation in the anti-brand movement

Article Type: Abstracts From: Strategic Direction, Volume 27, Issue 4

Fontenelle I.A.Critical Perspectives on International Business, 2010, Vol. 6 No. 4, Start page: 256, No. of pages: 17

Purpose – questions the possible reach of anti-brand movements and, by extension, those movements that criticize capitalism via consumption, in order to reflect on the impasse in critique, given the new formats that capitalism has assumed. Design/methodology/ approach – this paper takes as the object of its analysis the book No Logo and it is supported by qualitative research into the production of the discourse about the responsible consumer in the business media, as well as in books and articles published about the assimilation of resistance, and especially about anti-consumption and anti-brand movements. Findings – the relationship between the empirical findings of the research – the production of the responsible consumption discourse, in the period before, and after the anti-brand movements – and theoretical articles about empowerment and consumer accountability in the modern day shows how the assimilation of resistance occurred, via the responsible consumption discourse and also draws attention to its limits. Although the qualitative research used in the article was not initially planned for use in it, its findings were incorporated because they are widely applicable to what was being proposed. Originality/value – the papers originality lies in the fact that it shows the point that a criticism movement has reached after ten years. Although this was already clear to the author in 1999 when No Logo was written, a decade later it is possible to state that the movement has been assimilated by the market, especially since the appearance of the discourse of “responsible consumption”. What is completely novel in this article is this co-relation. At the end, the article also points to the social risks of attributing a large degree of accountability to individuals for consumption.Article type: Conceptual paperISSN: 1742-2043Reference: 39BB804

Keywords: Brand awareness, Consumer behaviour, Consumers, Social responsibility

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