Images of the Recent Past by Orser Charles E. Jr

Images of the Recent Past by Orser Charles E. Jr

Author:Orser, Charles E., Jr. [Orser, Charles E.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9780759117655
Publisher: AltaMira Press
Published: 2013-07-10T16:00:00+00:00


SUSAN L. HENRY

Chapter Nine

Factors Influencing Consumer Behavior in Turn-of the-Century Phoenix, Arizona

Introduction

Socioeconomic status has been put forth as an explanation for some of the variability in the archaeological record: People buy what they do because of their status position in society. This should not come as much of a surprise since it is quite apparent, in the world around us today, that less affluent, “lower-class” people possess different kinds of things than do more affluent, “upper-class” people (consider cars, houses, and clothes, for example). In fact, successful advertising firms and market analysts depend upon this phenomenon to develop advertising campaigns for manufacturers that sell a bewildering array of consumer goods (see Kassarjian and Robertson 1973a; Levy 1973; Martineau 1958). The valuable contribution made by historical archaeological research has been to verify empirically that this phenomenon did in fact occur in the past, and to suggest the degrees to which patterns of material culture varied according to socioeconomic status. While valid as a general explanation, it does not go quite far enough. How does socioeconomic status account for this variability—what are the processes? By looking at a particular kind of human behavior—consumer behavior—and the factors that influence that behavior, we can come closer to understanding why and how the variability covaries with status. If a sufficient database has been developed, research can focus on analytical units larger than the single site, making comparisons within and between social groups (socioeconomic as well as ethnic). This kind of research could lead toward an understanding of the nature of cultural and social systems in the historic past, the goal toward which we, as anthropologists, are striving to reach.

This article was originally published in Consumer Choice in Historical Archaeology, Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood, ed., pp. 359–395, New York and London: Plenum Press, ©1987.



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