Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Ch-Ch-Changes: The Geology of Artist Brand Evolutions | 2022 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Crossing Wires: Short-Circuiting (A)sexual Hierarchies of Knowledge in Marketing Theory | 2022 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| How the Market Perpetuates and Challenges Historical Socio-Cultural Marginalization: The Case of Middle-Class Dalits in India | 2022 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Negotiating liminality following life transitions: reflexive bricolage and liminal hotspots | 2021 |
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Dr Anton Siebert Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Customer Experience Journeys: Loyalty Loops Versus Involvement Spirals | 2020 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Establishing psychological relationship between female customers and retailers: a study of the small to medium scale clothing retail industry | 2020 |
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Gidraph Michuki Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Reclaiming the ‘tribe’ from ‘consumer tribes’: Consumption, modernization and Kenya’s tribes | 2019 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Recovering marketplace acceptance following an unsuccessful brand transformation | 2019 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Veil De-Racialization through Consumption: The Case of Veiled Muslim Women in France | 2019 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Do gambling game choices reflect a recreational gambler's motivations? | 2018 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| The Myths of the Market: A Skin-Deep, Discursive Analysis of the Fairness Phenomena in India | 2018 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Why some South Asian Muslims celebrate Christmas: Introducing 'Acculturation Trade-offs' | 2018 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| ‘David Bowie is different and I can be different too: Enacting difference across identities’ | 2017 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Ephemeral Consumerism: Crossing Territories of the Indian Female Body | 2017 |
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Dr Anton Siebert Professor Andrew Lindridge
| ‘Consumer Emotionology: Toward a Framework for Socio-Cultural Consumer Research on Emotion’ | 2016 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Agency and empowerment in consumption in relation to a patriarchal bargain: The case of Nigerian immigrant women in the UK | 2016 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Closing the skills gap – the recurring challenge | 2016 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Don’t Freak, I’m a Sikh: Stigma, Styled Identities and Social Distancing of the Turbaned Sikh Male | 2016 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Investigating Consumer Confusion Proneness Cross-Culturally: Empirical Evidence from the United States, Germany, and Thailand | 2016 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Investigating consumer confusion proneness cross-culturally: empirical evidence from the USA, Germany, and Thailand | 2016 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Resolving Contradictions in Human Brand Celebrity and Iconicity | 2016 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| (Virtual) ethnicity, the Internet, and well-being | 2015 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| ‘And Ziggy played guitar’: Bowie, the market, and the emancipation and resurrection of Ziggy Stardust | 2015 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Market segmentation by ethnicity: is it really feasible? | 2015 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Resolving Contradictions in Human Brand Celebrity and Iconicity | 2015 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| The Marijuana Marketplace: Cultural beliefs and its effect on legislation, the legitimate supply chain, and black markets | 2015 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| What Ziggy Stardust and David Bowie tells us about celebrity and market emancipation? | 2015 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| ‘Can celebrities ever escape their celeactor: The case of David Bowie and Ziggy Stardust’ | 2014 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Becoming Iconic: David Bowie from Man to Icon | 2014 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| Consumer ethnicity three decades after: a TCR agenda | 2014 |
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Professor Andrew Lindridge
| The manifestation of culture in product purchase: A cross-cultural comparison | 2014 |
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