dc.description.abstract | The aim of this dissertation is to contribute to our knowledge and understanding of the
various meanings of ethical consumption constructed in consumer culture, especially from
consumers’ viewpoint. This doctoral thesis belongs to the field of cultural and interpretive
consumption research (CCT). The research consists of an introductory essay and three articles,
of which two are published in academic journals. The introductory essay presents the general
research task, conceptual framework, and methodological choices and discussion to conclude
the main results of the dissertation. The research included in this dissertation uses qualitative
methods and applies discursive content analysis, geosemiotics, and ethnography.
Ethical consumption embraces a broad range of tendencies within the current consumer
culture related to global ecological and social concerns, values, and alternative consumption
practices. The starting point for this research endeavour is that ethical consumption is not a
static, unbiased, or neutral phenomenon, but a rather dynamic, socially constructed, and
contextual one, involving different values, ideologies, subject positions, and power relations.
The main task is to explore how the meanings of ethical consumption are constructed in
consumers’ everyday life contexts and how people make sense of ethical consumption. These
studies explore the phenomenon of ethical consumption from the perspectives of
contradictory interpretations, practices, spatiality, experientality, and aesthetics.
The dissertation contributes to the research on the complexity of ethical consumption,
providing an interpretation that offers contradictions on ethical consumption associated with
cultural factors rather than individual factors. Consumers are able to navigate between
multiple and conflicting meanings of ethical consumption and unravel these contradictions
by invoking different kinds of consumption practices that serve as situational and contextual
compromises. The study also contributes to the spatio-material understanding of ethical
consumption by showing that the meanings of responsibility are constructed in relation to
consumers’ experiences in retail environments. Thus, the situational, spatial, social, and
material aspects have an important influence on how the meanings of ethical consumption
are discursively constructed in a given context. The third contribution highlights the role of
aesthetic knowledge in ethical consumption by maintaining that these two phenomena are
interlinked. The study suggests that ethical consumption embodies aesthetic, hedonistic, and
care-related characteristics, in addition to political and knowledge-based features that have
been recognised in the previous research.
The results of this dissertation emphasise that the construction of ethical-consumption
discourses in the marketplaces and beyond is essentially influenced by culture and sociomaterial contexts. The interpretations and meanings of ethical consumption do not merely
arise from abstract discussions, moral reflections, or rational calculations, but emerge
similarly from real-world material contexts and places where consumers and commodities
come together. | |