Logo image
Why do crowds cause trouble?: Exploring affective instability in collectivity
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Why do crowds cause trouble?: Exploring affective instability in collectivity

Maíra Magalhães Lopes, Joel Hietanen and Jacob Östberg
Marketing Theory, Vol.21(4), pp.539-560
01/12/2021

Abstract

Affect affective synchronization Sara Ahmed collective bodies communities crowds Gabriel Tarde
Through our ethnographic study of urban activism collectives in São Paulo, we propose another approach for exploring the process of collective formations and their longevity. Rather than seeking out the representational meanings of individualized communities, we approach collectivity from the perspective of crowds. Crowds are affective. Crowds are contagious. By adopting affect-based theorizing, we discuss affective intensities that bring about collectivity before the individuals awaken to narrate their meaning-makings. In our ethnographic context, collectives resist manifestations of gentrification (i.e., consumer culture in itself) and offer us a multifaceted site of being and becoming with the crowds. We explore how connections and disconnections affectively rekindle the social expression of collective bodies in consumer culture. This way, we add new dimensions to extant theorizing of consumer collectivity that tends to focus on individualized meaning, stability, and harmony.
pdf
Marketing Theory - Why do crowds cause troubleDownloadView
Open Access
pdf
MT_Lopes_202112
Restricted Access

Metrics

5 File views/ downloads
12 Record Views

Details

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this contribution

Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.3 Management
6.3.65 Consumer Behavior
Web of Science research areas
Business
Logo image