Research @ Schulich
When you hear the words “self-care” what comes to mind? A quiet walk along a lake? A luxurious bubble bath? A strict diet and workout regime? A day’s worth of retail therapy? Self-care – which refers to actions we undertake to sustain and improve our lives, health and well-being- is a concept with a variety of meanings and interpretations. But self-care isn’t just some random set of activities that you do when you’re trying to recover from a bad day or are working to better your health -rather, it’s a collection of moral considerations that shape your actions and, ultimately, drive your activities as a consumer to carry out a set of specific self-care “scripts”. On the newest episode of the Research @ Schulich podcast, Schulich Associate Professor of Marketing, Ela Veresiu [https://schulich.yorku.ca/faculty/ela-veresiu/] talks about how consumers are shaped by a variety of factors - from moral considerations to health influencers - when making decisions about what types of “self-care” we individually see as valid, and what types we see as invalid and how this sense of internal moralizing can influence even everyday purchases.
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