Consumer grief: understanding how consumers deal with the loss of extraordinary experiences

Main Article Content

Fernanda Scussel
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7953-6710
Maribel Carvalho Suarez
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9736-5273

Abstract

Despite the interest in the role of consumption in the bereavement process, the concept of consumer grief and the process consumers experience when grieving remain undertheorized. This article aims to conceptualize consumer grief considering the disruption brought by the COVID-19 pandemic and the need to understand how consumers respond to this scenario, understanding the mechanisms consumers create to deal with loss. In view of the importance of extraordinary experiences due to their embodied, social, and transformational power, in this netnographic study, we explore marathon runners’ loss of an extraordinary experience. Consumers deal with the loss of an experience through a process composed of five mechanisms mediated by social media, which enable consumers to reverse, reframe, and reestablish the experience. The mechanisms of refutation, despair, abstention-compensation, transgression, and acceptance show how consumers behave in different moments of grief, allowing them to build their trajectories in the grieving process, individually and collectively. As a contribution, we expand the literature on consumer grief by focusing on the specific concept of consumer grief, explaining the processes consumers go through when they deal with the loss of an experience. Additionally, we present a collective perspective on the grieving process, shifting the analysis of the grief of an individual or a family unit to the socialization of grief.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Article Details

How to Cite
Scussel, F., & Suarez, M. C. (2022). Consumer grief: understanding how consumers deal with the loss of extraordinary experiences. Cadernos EBAPE.BR, 20(3), 339–351. https://doi.org/10.1590/1679-395120210046
Section
Articles

References

Abrahams, R. D. (1986). Ordinary and Extraordinary Experience. In V. W. Turner, & E. M. Bruner (Eds.), The Anthropology of Experience (pp. 45-73). Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press.

Arnould, E. J., & Price, L. L. (1993). River magic: Extraordinary experience and the extended service encounter. Journal of Consumer Research, 20(1), 24-45.

Arnould, E. J., & Thompson, C. J. (2005). Consumer culture theory (CCT): Twenty years of research. Journal of Consumer Research, 31(4), 868-882.

Belk, R. W. (1988). Possessions and the extended self. Journal of consumer research, 15(2), 139-168.

Belk, R. W. (1990). The role of possessions in constructing and maintaining a sense of past. Advances in Consumer Research, 17(1), 669-676.

Belk, R. W. (2020). Post-pandemic consumption: portal to a new world? Cadernos EBAPE.BR, 18(3), 639-647.

Belk, R. W., & Costa, J. A. (1998). The mountain man myth: A contemporary consuming fantasy. Journal of Consumer Research, 25(3), 218-240.

Belk, R. W., Sherry, J. F., Jr., & Wallendorf, M. (1988). A naturalistic inquiry into buyer and seller behavior at a swap meet. Journal of Consumer Research, 14(4), 449-470.

Bonsu, S. K. (2007). The presentation of dead selves in everyday life: Obituaries and impression management. Symbolic Interaction, 30(2), 199-219.

Bonsu, S. K., & Belk, R. W. (2003). Do not go cheaply into that good night: Death-ritual consumption in Asante, Ghana. Journal of Consumer Research, 30(1), 41-55.

Campbell, M. C., Inman, J. J., Kirmani, A., & Price, L. L. (2020). In times of trouble: A framework for understanding consumers’ responses to threats. Journal of Consumer Research, 47(3), 311-326.

Canning, L., & Szmigin, I. (2010). Death and disposal: The universal, environmental dilemma. Journal of Marketing Management, 26 (11-12), 1129-1142.

Celsi, R., Rose, R., & Leigh, T. (1993). An exploration of high-risk leisure consumption through skydiving. Journal of Consumer Research, 20(1), 1-23.

Cova, B. (2020). The new frontier of consumer experiences: escape through pain. AMS Review, 11, 60-69.

Cova, V., & Cova, B. (2019). Pain, suffering and the consumption of spirituality: a toe story. Journal of Marketing Management, 35 (5-6), 565-585.

Dodson, K. J. (1996). Peak experiences and mountain biking: Incorporating the bike into the extended self. ACR North American Advances, 23, 317-322.

Ertl, M. M., Longo, L. M., Groth, G. H., Berghuis, K. J., Prout, J., Hetz, M. C., … Martin, J. L. (2018). Running on empty: high self-esteem as a risk factor for exercise addiction. Addiction Research & Theory, 26(3), 205-211.

Fuchs, T. (2018). Presence in absence. The ambiguous phenomenology of grief. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, 17(1), 43-63.

Garcia, R., & Marinho, T. (2010). A morte na maratona: celebração da vida. Cultura, Ciencia y Deporte, 5(15), 45-53.

Gentry, J., Kennedy, P., Paul, C., & Hill, R. (1995). Family transitions during grief: Discontinuities in household consumption patterns. Journal of Business Research, 34(1), 67-79.

Goulding, C., Shankar, A., Elliott, R., & Canniford, R. (2009). The marketplace management of illicit pleasure. Journal of Consumer Research, 35(5), 759-771.

Guillard, V. (2017). Understanding the process of the disposition of a loved one’s possessions using a theoretical framework of grief. Consumption Markets & Culture, 20(5), 477-496.

Hill, R. (1991). Homeless women, special possessions, and the meaning of “home”: An ethnographic case study. Journal of consumer Research, 18(3), 298-310.

Hirshman, E. C., & Holbrook, M. B. (1982). The experimental aspects of consumption. The Journal of Consumer Research, 9(2), 132-140.

Husemann, K., & Eckhardt, G. (2019). Consumer deceleration. Journal of Consumer Research, 45(6), 1142-1163.

Kates, S. (2001). Disposition of possessions among families of people living with AIDS. Psychology & Marketing, 18(4), 365-387.

Keinan, A., & Kivetz, R. (2011). Productivity orientation and the consumption of collectable experiences. Journal of Consumer Research, 37(6), 935-950.

Kothgassner, O. D., & Probst, T. (2020). Digital is the New Normal: The Role of Digital Media during the COVID-19 Crisis. Digital Psychology, 1(2), 24-24.

Kozinets, R. (2015). Netnography: Redefined. London, UK: Sage.

Kubler-Ross, E. (1973). On Death and Dying. London, UK: Routledge.

Neimeyer, R. A. (2001). Meaning reconstruction and the experience of loss. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.

Neimeyer, R. A., Klass, D., & Dennis, M. (2014). A social constructionist account of grief: Loss and the narration of meaning. Death studies, 38(8), 485-498.

O’Donohoe, S., & Turley, D. (2005). Till death us do part? Consumption and the negotiation of relationships following a bereavement. In G. Menon & A. R. Rao (Eds.), NA - Advances in Consumer Research (Vol. 32, pp. 625-626). Duluth, MN: Association for Consumer Research.

O’Donohoe, S., & Turley, D. (2006). Compassion at the counter: Service providers and bereaved consumers. Human Relations, 59(10), 1429-1448.

Ortega, F., & Orsini, M. (2020). Governing COVID-19 without government in Brazil: Ignorance, neoliberal authoritarianism, and the collapse of public health leadership. Global public health, 15(9), 1257-1277.

Phipps, M., & Ozanne, J. (2017). Routines disrupted: Reestablishing security through practice alignment. Journal of Consumer Research, 44(2), 361-380.

Robinson, R., Patterson, I., & Axelsen, M. (2014). The “loneliness of the long-distance runner” no more: Marathons and social worlds. Journal of Leisure Research, 46(4), 375-394.

Rupprecht, P. M., & Matkin, G. S. (2012). Finishing the race: Exploring the meaning of marathons for women who run multiple races. Journal of Leisure Research, 44(3), 308-331.

Saldaña, J. (2015). The coding manual for qualitative researchers. Newcastle, UK: Sage.

Schatzki, T. (1996). Social practices: A Wittgensteinian approach to human activity and the social. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

Schembri, S., & Boyle, M. V. (2013). Visual ethnography: Achieving rigorous and authentic interpretations. Journal of Business Research, 66(9), 1251-1254.

Scott, R., Cayla, J., & Cova, B. (2017). Selling pain to the saturated self. Journal of Consumer Research, 44(1), 22-43.

Tumbat, G., & Belk, R. (2011). Marketplace tensions in extraordinary experiences. Journal of Consumer Research, 38(1), 42-61.

Tumbat, G., & Belk, R. (2013). Co‐construction and performancescapes. Journal of Consumer Behaviour, 12(1), 49-59.

Turley, D., & O’Donohoe, S. (2012). The sadness of lives and the comfort of things: Goods as evocative objects in bereavement. Journal of Marketing Management, 28(11-12), 1331-1353.

Walsh, F. (2020). Loss and resilience in the time of COVID‐19: Meaning making, hope, and transcendence. Family Process, 59(3), 898-911.

Yousfi, N., Bragazzi, N., Briki, W., Zmijewski, P., & Chamari, K. (2020). The COVID-19 pandemic: how to maintain a healthy immune system during the lockdown – a multidisciplinary approach with special focus on athletes. Biology of Sport, 37(3), 211-216.