Skip to main content
Article
Talking to Ourselves: A Dialogical Exploration of Consumption Experiences
Journal of Consumer Research (2006)
  • George R. Milne, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • Shalini Bahl
Abstract

This article introduces the dialogical nature of self to study consumers' inner dialogs in order to understand consumers' marketplace decisions and conflicts. The authors explore the meaning of consumption at multiple self levels and dialogical relationships to manage differences. The study uses mixed methods including in-depth interviews, multidimensional scaling, cluster analysis, and metaphors to distill important voices in their informants. They find that the consumption stories vary across self levels. The meta-self level reflects a dispassionate representation of the primary I-positions in consumers and does not explain what the consumers experience at the time of actual consumption. An examination of inconsistent consumption preferences at the level of I-positions reveals that dialogical relationships labeled compartmentalization, compassion, negotiation, and coalition can avoid and manage conflicts, while relationships involving opposition and domination reflect unresolved conflicts. Suggestions to use the dialogical self model for addressing issues of negative selves, addictions, and domination in future research are provided.

Disciplines
Publication Date
January, 2006
Publisher Statement
DOI: 10.1086/650000
Citation Information
George R. Milne and Shalini Bahl. "Talking to Ourselves: A Dialogical Exploration of Consumption Experiences" Journal of Consumer Research Vol. 37 Iss. 6 (2006)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/george_milne/1/