Abstract

This article introduces the subculture of consumption as an analytic category through which to better understand consumers and the manner in which they organize their lives and identities. Recognizing that consumption activities, product categories, or even brands may serve as the basis for interaction and social cohesion, the concept of the subculture of consumption solves many problems inherent in the use of ascribed social categories as devices for understanding consumer behavior. This article is based on three years of ethnographic fieldwork with Harley-Davidson motorcycle owners. A key feature of the fieldwork was a process of progressive contextualization of the researchers from outsiders to insiders situated within the subculture. Analysis of the social structure, dominant values, and revealing symbolic behaviors of this distinct, consumption-oriented subculture have led to the advancement of a theoretical framework that situates subcultures of consumption in the context of modern consumer culture and discusses, among other implications, a symbiosis between such subcultures and marketing institutions. Transferability of the principal findings of this research to other subcultures of consumption is established through comparisons with ethnographies of other self-selecting, consumption-oriented subcultures.

Keywords

Subculture (biology)Consumption (sociology)EthnographySociologySituatedContextualizationContext (archaeology)Social scienceAnthropologyComputer scienceInterpretation (philosophy)

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Publication Info

Year
1995
Type
article
Volume
22
Issue
1
Pages
43-43
Citations
2147
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2147
OpenAlex
134
Influential
1370
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Cite This

John W. Schouten, James H. McAlexander (1995). Subcultures of Consumption: An Ethnography of the New Bikers. Journal of Consumer Research , 22 (1) , 43-43. https://doi.org/10.1086/209434

Identifiers

DOI
10.1086/209434

Data Quality

Data completeness: 77%