How do consumers make sense of sustainable consumption: a study on lived experience and discourses
Abstract
This paper investigates the understanding of sustainably conscious consumers on their
consumption and non-consumption experience of sustainable clothes from a
phenomenological perspective. It further elaborates on the underlying discourses that inform
consumers way of understanding sustainable consumption and practices aligned with that
understanding. For this objective a Foucauldian discourse analysis was integrated under
phenomenological framework in order to gain insights into both the consumers' reflection of
their ‘lived’ experience at micro level and how these experiences reflected the dominant
discourses that inform their understanding, from a macro level perspective. Nine interviews
were conducted with nine Swedish sustainably conscious female consumers who purchased
both sustainable and non-sustainable clothing items. The findings illustrated three
perspectives where consumers experienced different types of emotions ranging from positive
ones, like empowerment and gratification, to negative ones, like anxiety and guilt, showing
that consumer experience of sustainable consumption was highly emotional rather than
rational. In the case of clothes, the nature of clothes having high symbolic values added to the
various conflicting discourses, making the consumers experience even more intense internal
conflicts when not acting accordingly to their sustainable beliefs. In addition, consumers
understanding was also found to be highly subjective, individualized and influenced by prior
experience, as consumers made sense of different discourses and shaped them in their own
way to fit in with their own values and everyday life. They further made use of different
alternative sustainable consumption practices other than the one being asked in order to
address their sustainable values and identities.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Marketing and Consumption
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2018-07-03Author
Le, Trang
Pavasovic, Angela
Keywords
Sustainable consumption
sustainable clothes
sustainable discourses
fashion discourses
identity creation
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project
2018:167
Language
eng