Hip children, good mothers – children's clothing as capital investment?




Åberg E., Huvila J.

PublisherEMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD

2019

Young Consumers

YOUNG CONSUM

20

3

153

166

14

1758-7212

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1108/YC-06-2018-00816



Purpose: A growing body of sociological literature defines physical appearance as a form of capital, a convertible resource in contemporary societies. The purpose of this study is to examine the importance of consuming on children's fashion as a part of this appearance-oriented consumer culture. We investigate if the mothers we interviewed see their children as their extended self and actually are negotiating their own aesthetic capital through their children's clothing.

Design/methodology/approach: In this study, we utilise 10 semi-structured themed interviews with Finnish mothers who were recruited from a popular Facebook group, focused on discussing children's fashion.
Findings: Results indicate that women see their children as their extended self, and as such, they can be seen negotiating their own aesthetic capital through consuming practices for their children. Additionally, the investment in the physical appearance of children can be seen as a construction of a contemporary understanding of proper motherhood in the middle-class context.

Originality/value: Although extensive research has been carried out in expenditure on children's fashion, this research offers a novel approach by combining research on parenting in a consumer culture with the theory of aesthetic capital to explore the materially based construction of parenting in the Finnish context.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 13:50