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Gift Giving in Enduring Dyadic Relationships: The Micropolitics of Mother-Daughter Gift Exchange

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Gift Giving in Enduring Dyadic Relationships: The Micropolitics of Mother-Daughter Gift Exchange. / Liu, Chih-Ling; Kozinets, Robert ; Patterson, Anthony et al.
In: Journal of Consumer Research, Vol. 51, No. 3, 31.10.2024, p. 616-633.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Liu CL, Kozinets R, Patterson A, Zhao X. Gift Giving in Enduring Dyadic Relationships: The Micropolitics of Mother-Daughter Gift Exchange. Journal of Consumer Research. 2024 Oct 31;51(3):616-633. Epub 2024 Jan 9. doi: 10.1093/jcr/ucae002

Author

Liu, Chih-Ling ; Kozinets, Robert ; Patterson, Anthony et al. / Gift Giving in Enduring Dyadic Relationships : The Micropolitics of Mother-Daughter Gift Exchange. In: Journal of Consumer Research. 2024 ; Vol. 51, No. 3. pp. 616-633.

Bibtex

@article{84ca75581ef140acbf613c2d7ff092ec,
title = "Gift Giving in Enduring Dyadic Relationships: The Micropolitics of Mother-Daughter Gift Exchange",
abstract = "This article investigates the dynamics of long-term gift exchange between British mothers and their adult daughters, delving into the processes behind dyadic gift giving. Through 54 comprehensive interviews, we elaborate the micropolitics that characterize these dynamics. Micropolitics refers to the subtle, everyday interactions, including gift exchange, that shape the ongoing negotiation of roles and the management of conflict or consensus within relationships. The study uncovers how these micropolitics manifest through four distinct processes of gift exchange: confirming, endorsing, connoting, and commanding. Gifts emerge as key instruments in this negotiation, serving as a medium for the reciprocal regulation of role behavior concerning gender, identity, and both endo-dyadic (within the dyad) and exo-dyadic (outside the dyad) roles. In contrast to previous research that adopts a synchronic (snapshot) approach to gift giving, our diachronic (over time) perspective emphasizes how power dynamics, intent, and identity politics evolve to sustain and transform relationships. Our findings illustrate the important communicative and power-laden processes of gift exchange in enduring relations, explaining why even unwanted gifts can have significant bonding value. Our study offers fresh perspectives on the continuous evolution of relationship and role dynamics, as viewed through the practices of gift exchange.",
keywords = "gift-giving, gift-receipt, gift exchange, micropolitics, dyadic relationships",
author = "Chih-Ling Liu and Robert Kozinets and Anthony Patterson and Xin Zhao",
year = "2024",
month = oct,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1093/jcr/ucae002",
language = "English",
volume = "51",
pages = "616--633",
journal = "Journal of Consumer Research",
issn = "0093-5301",
publisher = "University of Chicago",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gift Giving in Enduring Dyadic Relationships

T2 - The Micropolitics of Mother-Daughter Gift Exchange

AU - Liu, Chih-Ling

AU - Kozinets, Robert

AU - Patterson, Anthony

AU - Zhao, Xin

PY - 2024/10/31

Y1 - 2024/10/31

N2 - This article investigates the dynamics of long-term gift exchange between British mothers and their adult daughters, delving into the processes behind dyadic gift giving. Through 54 comprehensive interviews, we elaborate the micropolitics that characterize these dynamics. Micropolitics refers to the subtle, everyday interactions, including gift exchange, that shape the ongoing negotiation of roles and the management of conflict or consensus within relationships. The study uncovers how these micropolitics manifest through four distinct processes of gift exchange: confirming, endorsing, connoting, and commanding. Gifts emerge as key instruments in this negotiation, serving as a medium for the reciprocal regulation of role behavior concerning gender, identity, and both endo-dyadic (within the dyad) and exo-dyadic (outside the dyad) roles. In contrast to previous research that adopts a synchronic (snapshot) approach to gift giving, our diachronic (over time) perspective emphasizes how power dynamics, intent, and identity politics evolve to sustain and transform relationships. Our findings illustrate the important communicative and power-laden processes of gift exchange in enduring relations, explaining why even unwanted gifts can have significant bonding value. Our study offers fresh perspectives on the continuous evolution of relationship and role dynamics, as viewed through the practices of gift exchange.

AB - This article investigates the dynamics of long-term gift exchange between British mothers and their adult daughters, delving into the processes behind dyadic gift giving. Through 54 comprehensive interviews, we elaborate the micropolitics that characterize these dynamics. Micropolitics refers to the subtle, everyday interactions, including gift exchange, that shape the ongoing negotiation of roles and the management of conflict or consensus within relationships. The study uncovers how these micropolitics manifest through four distinct processes of gift exchange: confirming, endorsing, connoting, and commanding. Gifts emerge as key instruments in this negotiation, serving as a medium for the reciprocal regulation of role behavior concerning gender, identity, and both endo-dyadic (within the dyad) and exo-dyadic (outside the dyad) roles. In contrast to previous research that adopts a synchronic (snapshot) approach to gift giving, our diachronic (over time) perspective emphasizes how power dynamics, intent, and identity politics evolve to sustain and transform relationships. Our findings illustrate the important communicative and power-laden processes of gift exchange in enduring relations, explaining why even unwanted gifts can have significant bonding value. Our study offers fresh perspectives on the continuous evolution of relationship and role dynamics, as viewed through the practices of gift exchange.

KW - gift-giving

KW - gift-receipt

KW - gift exchange

KW - micropolitics

KW - dyadic relationships

U2 - 10.1093/jcr/ucae002

DO - 10.1093/jcr/ucae002

M3 - Journal article

VL - 51

SP - 616

EP - 633

JO - Journal of Consumer Research

JF - Journal of Consumer Research

SN - 0093-5301

IS - 3

ER -