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Glocal understandings: female readers’ perceptions of the new woman in Chinese advertising

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Abstract

Research in international advertising has often taken a dichotomized approach, as exemplified by the global standardization vs localization debate. It is assumed under the standardization approach that the globalization process will absorb different national cultures into a global commercial culture, such that standardized advertising should be preferred. The current research argues that the dichotomization approach may have oversimplified the way consumers read and interpret ad images. We postulate that consumers in a transitional economy apply a variety of reading approaches, including different cultural interpretive strategies and self-referencing, to absorb global images into their cultural and consumption schemas. This is commonly referred to as glocalization. We developed a typology of modern women images in Chinese magazine advertising, potential interpretive strategies, and self-referencing responses in this research. Results of a content analysis and a reader response study support our postulations. Implications are discussed.

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Notes

  1. Miss Fashion was categorized as a fashion magazine in one survey (2003 Spring Average Issue Readership Survey) but as a women's magazine in another (Yao, 2003).

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Acknowledgements

The financial assistance provided by the Research Grant Council (RGC) competitive earmarked research grant is acknowledged.

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Correspondence to Kineta H Hung.

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Accepted by Arie Y Lewin, Editor-in-Chief and David K Tse, Departmental Editor, 2 February 2007. This paper has been with the authors for two revisions.

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Hung, K., Li, S. & Belk, R. Glocal understandings: female readers’ perceptions of the new woman in Chinese advertising. J Int Bus Stud 38, 1034–1051 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.jibs.8400303

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