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Acknowledgements
This research would not have been possible without the generous participation of 20 women
who offered to tell me their story about New Zealand identity and to share their views with
me. I am deeply grateful for the privilege of getting to know about their lives and learning
their stories. Thanks for the expert advice and in-depth knowledge offered by Associate
Professor Laurence Simmons and Dr Luke Goode both of the Department of Film, Television
and Media Studies at the University of Auckland.
I would also like to acknowledge the help of a number of people whose assistance facilitated
the fieldwork in this study. To my friends and workmates who kindly recruited their friends
and associates to participate in this study—I am indebted to you. Many thanks to all the
people in the advertising industry who generously assisted in the process of selecting brand
advertising material and providing DVD copies of advertisements: Wendy Shrivers at
Assignment Group; Kevin Stroud at Clemenger BBDO; Paul Courtney at Colenso BBDO;
Scott Wallace at DDB; James Mok and the team at Draft FCB; Nick Baylis and Jane Power
at M&C Saatchi Ltd; Greg Partington and Robyn Vaughan at Ogilvy New Zealand; Kay
Boyle at Publicis Mojo; Simon Ellis at Republik Communications Ltd; Andrew Stone and
Jane Mill at Saatchi and Saatchi; David Walden and Peter Bracegirdle at TBWA \Whybin;
Garry Urlwin at Urlwin, McDonald and Clients; Jeremy Littlejohn at Work Communications;
Jon Ramage and Jo McMillan at Y&R; and Jill Rowdon and Ruben Bowyer at Nielsen Media
Research. In preparing the digital files for use in my field work I also received fantastic
service from Viral Shah, the Digital Media Technical Supervisor at the University of
Auckland Business School. And, throughout the whole project I have received superb advice
and practical assistance with all things technical from Mark Woods, Information Technology
Research Analyst in the Department of Commerce/Economics and Finance, Massey
University.
I have benefitted greatly from training and advice from Lyn Lavery at Academic Consulting
Ltd, drawing on her extensive knowledge of NVivo software, digital recording, transcription
processes and many aspects of the production of a qualitative research thesis. Thanks to
Sharon Henderson, Executive Assistant in the Department of Commerce/Economics and
Finance, Massey University for her kind support and assistance in accessing research funds. I
v
also gratefully acknowledge the support of Massey University by way of the Advanced
Degree Award which facilitated release from teaching duties.
I have been constantly encouraged and supported in my PhD studies by my supervisor and by
Professor Lawrence Rose, Head of Department and latterly Pro Vice Chancellor, College of
Business, Massey University. I feel privileged to have been supervised throughout this study
by Professor Margo Buchanan-Oliver, whose wisdom, intellectual strength and generous
allocation of time over the years has been greatly to my benefit. Thanks to my fellow PhD
students at Massey University and the University of Auckland Business School—your
friendship and willingness to share insights from your own academic journeys have been very
much valued. Finally, but not least, thanks to my family who have lived the PhD process with
me, providing unfailing moral support.
Undertaking this research has involved the input, encouragement and cooperation of many
people, but any errors in the final thesis are mine alone.
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Table of Contents
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2.4.2 Self Concept and Self Identities.................................................... 29
2.4.3 Brands, Consumption and the Symbolic Project of the Self......... 31
2.4.4 Evolving Resources Shaping Self and Identity............................. 33
2.4.4.1 Narratives and Identity........................................................... 34
2.4.4.2 Myth and Identity................................................................... 35
2.4.4.3 Nostalgia and Identity............................................................ 36
2.4.5 Social Selves, Tribes and Communities........................................ 37
2.4.6 Summary of Self and Social Identity............................................ 39
2.5 National Identity................................................................................. 40
2.5.1 Introduction to National Identity Literature.................................. 40
2.5.2 National Identity Definitions......................................................... 40
2.5.2.1 Conceptualising the Nation.................................................... 40
2.5.2.2 Conceptualising National Identity......................................... 42
2.5.3 Reproduction and Negotiation of National Identity...................... 44
2.5.4 Acculturation and National Identity.............................................. 47
2.5.5 Intergenerational National Identity Effects................................... 48
2.5.5.1 Families, Children and NID................................................... 49
2.5.5.2 School, Children and NID...................................................... 50
2.5.5.3 Mass Media, Children and NID............................................. 50
2.5.6 National Identity and National Cinema......................................... 51
2.5.7 Relevance of National Identity Construct..................................... 52
2.5.8 Nation and National Identity in Marketing and Advertising......... 56
2.5.8.1 Nation Brands........................................................................ 56
2.5.8.2 Patriotism in Advertisements................................................. 57
2.5.8.3 Advertisement Country of Origin.......................................... 58
2.5.8.4 National Identity in Advertisements...................................... 59
2.5.8.5 National Identity and Icons in New Zealand Advertising...... 59
2.5.9 Linking National Identity and Brands........................................... 61
2.6 Summary of Literature Review........................................................ 62
2.7 Research Questions............................................................................ 63
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CHAPTER THREE: Methodology................................................................ 65
3.1 Introduction to Methodology............................................................ 65
3.2 Research Objectives and Questions.................................................. 65
3.3 Methods............................................................................................... 67
3.3.1 Overview of Methods.................................................................... 67
3.3.2 Development of National Identity Categorisation........................ 67
3.3.2.1 Myths...................................................................................... 68
3.3.2.2 Collective Values and Rituals................................................ 70
3.3.2.3 Psychological Characteristics and National Stereotypes...... 70
3.3.2.4 Attachment to Place............................................................... 71
3.3.2.5 Popular Symbols.................................................................... 72
3.3.3 Brand Advertisement Selection..................................................... 73
3.3.3.1 Secondary Data on Brands.................................................... 74
3.3.4 Participant Selection Criteria........................................................ 74
3.3.5 Participant Recruitment Strategy.................................................. 76
3.3.6 Participant Information Sheet and Participant Consent Forms..... 78
3.3.7 Participant Compensation............................................................. 78
3.3.8 Use of Two-part Interview Method............................................... 79
3.3.8.1 Life History Narrative Interview............................................ 80
3.3.8.2 Friendship Pair Interviews..................................................... 81
3.3.8.3 Interview Pretesting............................................................... 85
3.3.9 Logistical Details of Data Collection............................................ 86
3.3.9.1 Research Journal.................................................................... 87
3.3.9.2 Member Checking Processes................................................. 87
3.3.9.3 Issues Relating to Data Collection......................................... 89
3.3.9.4 Issues Relating to Conversation Transcription...................... 90
3.3.10 Data Analysis............................................................................... 91
3.3.11 Narrative Analysis........................................................................ 92
3.3.12 Visual Rhetoric............................................................................. 93
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3.4 Methodology....................................................................................... 94
3.4.1 Discourse Analysis........................................................................ 95
3.5 Introspection....................................................................................... 96
3.5.1 Guided Introspection..................................................................... 97
3.5.2 Interactive Introspection................................................................ 97
3.5.3 Reflexivity within Research.......................................................... 99
3.5.4 Researcher Introspection............................................................... 101
3.5.5 Abduction from Introspection....................................................... 102
3.6 Theoretical Perspective...................................................................... 102
3.6.1 Hermeneutics................................................................................. 103
3.6.2 Introspection and Narrative Construction..................................... 107
3.7 Epistemology....................................................................................... 108
3.8 Research Trustworthiness, Rigour and Quality.............................. 110
3.9 Summary of Methods Chapter.......................................................... 112
CHAPTER FOUR: Findings.......................................................................... 115
4.1 Overview............................................................................................. 115
4.2 Profiles of Research Participants...................................................... 115
4.3 Raw Summaries of National Identity Themes................................. 117
4.4 Key Themes of National Identity...................................................... 117
4.5 Brand Ads and Experiences of NID Themes................................... 119
4.6 Successfully Operationalising New Zealandness in Ads................. 139
4.7 Brands and New Zealandness........................................................... 141
4.7.1 Brand Usage, Heritage and Nostalgia........................................... 142
4.7.2 Brand Reputation Linked to Brand New Zealand......................... 143
4.7.3 Brand Ads and Place Imagery....................................................... 144
4.7.4 Brand Ads and Kiwi Music........................................................... 145
4.7.5 Brand Ads and NID Myths, Values and Practices........................ 145
4.7.6 Brand Ads and New Zealand Celebrity Endorsers........................ 146
4.7.7 Memorable Experiences Consuming Brand Ads.......................... 147
4.7.8 Brand Placement in Iconic New Zealand Movie.......................... 147
4.7.9 Brand Stories Imitate Life Experiences or Vice Versa?................ 148
4.8 Buying or Using Brands that have New Zealandness..................... 148
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4.8.1 Why Not Use or Buy Brands with New Zealandness?................. 149
4.8.2 Other Reasons for Buying or Using Brands.................................. 150
4.8.3 New Zealandness in Brands Affects Buying and Usage............... 152
4.8.3.1 Iconic New Zealand Brands................................................... 152
4.8.3.2 Brand Rituals.......................................................................... 154
4.8.3.3 Brands that Epitomise Brand New Zealand........................... 154
4.8.3.4 Sentimental Attachment to Locally Owned Brands............... 155
4.8.3.5 Powerful Brand Sponsorships................................................ 156
4.9 Social Processes: Linking People through Brands.......................... 157
4.9.1 Examining Brand Ads and Social Experiences............................. 157
4.9.2 Brand Ads as Conversational Resources....................................... 159
4.9.3 Sharing Consumption of Brands................................................... 160
4.9.4 Mothers and Children Talking about Ads..................................... 161
4.9.5 Intergenerational Transfer of National Identity............................ 163
4.9.6 Usable Past: Social Memories Using Brand Ad Stories............... 164
4.9.7 Sustaining National Identity Using Brand Ad Stories.................. 165
4.9.8 Acculturating New Immigrants Using Brand Stories................... 169
4.9.9 Maintaining National Identity Boundaries.................................... 170
4.9.10 Competency and Performance of National Identity...................... 170
4.10 Summary of Findings Chapter......................................................... 172
CHAPTER FIVE: Discussion........................................................................ 173
5.1 Overview............................................................................................. 173
5.2 Experiences of NID in Brand Marcoms........................................... 173
5.2.1 NID Myths in Brand Marcoms..................................................... 174
5.2.2 NID and Values and Rituals in Brand Marcoms........................... 175
5.2.3 NID and Psychological Characteristics in Brand Marcoms.......... 176
5.2.4 NID and Attachment to Places in Brand Marcoms....................... 178
5.2.5 NID and Popular Symbols in Brand Marcoms.............................. 179
5.2.6 Consumption of Brand Narratives and Images............................. 180
5.2.7 Experiential Dimensions of Brands.............................................. 180
5.2.8 NID Categorisation Framework Discussion................................. 181
5.2.9 Answers to Research Question 1: How do consumers
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experience national identity in brand communications?............... 181
5.3 Social Processes Affecting NID through Brands............................. 182
5.3.1 Discursive Reproduction and Negotiation of NID via Brands...... 182
5.3.2 Intergenerational Transfer of NID via Brands.............................. 184
5.3.3 Acculturation and NID via Brands................................................ 185
5.3.4 Maintenance of NID Boundaries via Brands................................ 186
5.3.5 Social Processes and Linking Value............................................. 187
5.3.6 Answers to Research Question 2: What are the social processes
affecting national identity through brand experiences?................ 189
5.4 National Identity and Brand Marcoms............................................ 189
5.4.1 Generation Specific National Identity.......................................... 191
5.5 Brand Consumption Rituals.............................................................. 192
5.6 Iconicity and Brands with Consumption Heritage.......................... 194
5.7 Narratives, Nostalgia and the Usable Past....................................... 196
5.8 Methodological Issues........................................................................ 199
5.5 Summary of Discussion Chapter...................................................... 201
CHAPTER SIX: Conclusions......................................................................... 203
6.1 Overview............................................................................................. 203
6.2 Conclusions......................................................................................... 203
6.3 Theoretical Contributions................................................................. 207
6.4 Methodological Contributions.......................................................... 210
6.5 Implications for Practitioners........................................................... 213
6.6 Limitations.......................................................................................... 216
6.7 Future Research................................................................................. 218
6.8 Final Conclusions............................................................................... 220
APPENDICES................................................................................................. 223
REFERENCE LIST........................................................................................ 321
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List of Tables
Table 1. Abridged Summary of Brand Eras, Relevant Literature, and Fundamental
Ideas.................................................................................................................. 14
Table 2. Definitions of Nation......................................................................................... 41
List of Figures
Figure 1. Conceptual Model of the Research................................................................. 4
List of Appendices
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xiv
CHAPTER ONE ______ INTRODUCTION
Chapter One
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Overview
This chapter provides an introduction to the thesis by outlining the background which
motivates this study, and dealing with why the topic is important. It gives the main purpose of
the study, introduces aspects of the theoretical framework relevant to the research, describes
the research objectives and research questions, overviews the methodology, briefly
summarises the main contributions of the research, and details the structure of the thesis.
1.2 Background
Despite the fact that there is little mention of nations or national identity in marketing
literature, it is striking to note that advertising is regarded as playing a central role in
conceptualising the nation (see, for example, Askew and Wilk 2002; Frosh 2007; Millard,
Riegel, and Wright 2002; Moreno 2003; Prideaux 2009). Writers in the fields of cultural
studies, political science, journalism and mass-communication are in no doubt:
“advertisements sell more than products; they sell values, ways of life, conceptions of self and
‘Other’” and ideologies including capitalist consumerism, imperialism, racism and patriarchy
(Hogan 2005, p.193). Given that brands are typically the sponsors of such advertisements1
and that brands are partially consumed and experienced via their advertisements, the question
is asked, what is the relationship between brands and national identity?
Branding is an area of study which is theoretically underdeveloped (Keller 2003). Brands are
known to be used by consumers for purposes other than the persuasive and mostly
commercial ones intended by brand owners (Elliott and Wattanasuwan 1998; O'Donohoe
1994; Ritson and Elliott 1999). There is strong evidence to suggest that consumption of
1
The terms commercial, advertisement and ad are used interchangeably
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CHAPTER ONE ______ INTRODUCTION
brands and the cultural symbolism surrounding brands has a role to play in the expression of
self-identity and in fostering community (Cova 1997; Firat and Dholakia 1998; Muñiz and
O'Guinn 2005; Schouten and McAlexander 1995). However, while there is a body of research
relating to the role of brands in so-called brand communities (Muñiz and O'Guinn 2001) there
are very few studies, apart from Kates (2004), addressing how brands impact on other forms
of community—and there is little to suggest how brands affect national identity.
There are calls in the marketing literature for research to develop a greater understanding of
brands (Ballantyne and Aitken 2007; Brodie, Glynn, and Little 2006; Jevons 2007) especially
using new perspectives (and those relating to consumers’ experiences rather than producers’
intentions). This study takes up that challenge by taking a consumer research approach to the
study of brands. That is to say, the central preoccupation of this thesis is with brand
consumption, or more particularly, with consumer experiences of brand consumption. By
taking a consumer focus, both the social experiences of brand consumption and national
identity may be examined in connection with each other.
National identity is a construct that is little studied in the field of consumer research. Despite
this, a review of the literature in several specialist journals devoted to the study of nations and
identity points to numerous contemporary contexts where national identity is being actively
negotiated, and is relevant and important to consumers. While processes such as globalisation
suggest that consumers increasingly have an external focus and a global outlook (see, for
example, Levitt 1983), these very processes are partly responsible for an apparent increase in
the importance and significance of local identities. As one overarching type of local identity,
national identity is a creditable and relevant contemporary form of personal and community
identification. The literature suggests that a well developed and strong sense of national
identity has the power to be a productive and enabling force within society (Aldridge 2002).
In a number of nations, administrations have made defining national identity a key issue.
Thus, this research has direct relevance to government policy makers as they address strategic
priorities of advancing national identity.
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CHAPTER ONE ______ INTRODUCTION
The strength of Elliott and Wattanasuwan’s (1998) model is in acknowledging the integrated
impact of brand stories (provided by marketing communications) and supplementary brand
consumption experiences on personal and social selves. What this thesis seeks to do, is to
concentrate on one part of their model, taking into account the social uses aspect of
advertising (Ritson and Elliott 1999), and focusing particularly on brand consumption
experience that impacts on the social self. The idea is to further explore the brand fostered
‘communitas’ (Arnould and Price 1993) generated between those with shared social selves—
Cova (1997) calls this ‘linking value’—as a result of various brand consumption experiences.
Such an approach would extend understanding of brand impact on the social self, taking into
account the conceptualisation of the social self as shared, consensual and normative,
independent of the personal self. Of particular importance is the expectation that brands,
through their marketing communications, directly impact on ‘others’ and on the formation of
one’s social identities without being experienced firsthand by the personal self. This thesis
addresses the social aspect of social identity, considering consumers in a social context rather
than the more commonly studied individual context.
The conceptualisation of national identity in this thesis draws on self concept, collective
identity and social identity theory (Tajfel and Turner 1979). National identity is a form of
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CHAPTER ONE ______ INTRODUCTION
The literature informing this thesis has been selected to highlight elements of the conceptual
model set out in Figure 1. The conceptualisation of shared national identity linking people
together is combined with the conceptualisation of brands as resources used in identity
projects. Thus, the focus of this thesis is on consumer experiences of brand marketing
communications as a particular resource for the construction of national identity, and as
playing a role in social processes that link consumers together in national communities.
Mediated experience
Lived experience
of brands
of brands
(marketing
(purchase & usage)
communications)
National Identity as a
Personal self identity
social self identity
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CHAPTER ONE ______ INTRODUCTION
A review of the relevant literature on brands, self and social identity and national identity
demonstrates a lack of knowledge about national identity as it relates to brand experiences. It
is proposed that there is a significant theoretical gap in the literature regarding how brands
affect national identity. More particularly, consumers’ lived experiences of brand and
national identity represent a gap in the literature that is worthy of investigation. The gaps in
the literature lead to the exposition of two specific linked research objectives:
2. What are the social processes affecting national identity through brand experiences?
previously generated narratives are elicited, adding to the depth and range of experiences
available for analysis. Interviews are digitally audio-taped and transcribed. Subsequent
analysis is facilitated using NVivo8 qualitative data management software.
The study of consumers’ lived experiences of brand and national identity is conducted with a
focus on ‘everyday’ for-profit goods and services brands within the New Zealand national
context. This is a setting where national identity is of contemporary importance to
government policy makers (as will be discussed later) and is a matter of general public
interest. It is intended that the findings will be theoretically generalisable and have relevance
in other national settings.
This research takes a fresh approach to the primary field of study, branding, and is informed
by theory derived from several different disciplines. Fundamentally, this is a study of how
consumers use brands for their own purposes. The importance of studying what consumers do
with brands has been emphasised by the Association for Consumer Research for some years.
In synthesising the ACR conference first special session on ‘Consumers and Brand Meaning:
Brands, the Self and Others,’ John Sherry states “Business students and academic
researchers need to pay more attention to what consumers do with brands” (Muñiz 1997,
p.309).
When approaching this area of research, which has been identified as important for the
ongoing development of brand knowledge and consumption phenomena, the researcher has
chosen to utilise a strategy of “poach[ing] and cross-fertiliz[ing] ideas, methods, and
contexts from a variety of theoretical conversations that differentially address core topics”
(Arnould and Thompson 2005, p.869). The importance of this approach is in utilising
established theory and making theoretical links to well researched areas, such national
cinema and social identity. In this new area of enquiry into national identity such extant
theory provides a strong framework in which to work.
The potential contribution of this study encompasses a range of theoretical issues, including
the development of theory regarding brand experiences affecting national identity and
feelings of belonging through specific social processes; conceptualisation of brands as
repositories of national stories and as active agents of national identity; expansion of iconic
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CHAPTER ONE ______ INTRODUCTION
This potential methodological contribution of this study includes the articulation of theory
building using introspective narrative methods; the development of a two-part interview
procedure and the use of friendship pairs in-depth interviews. This study also has potential
implications for practitioners and policy makers. There are prospects of providing insights for
brand owners into leveraging brands; conclusions for brand marcoms creators, regarding the
potential benefits of utilising socio-cultural readings of brands; recommendations for brand
owners to consider aspects of national identity and the power of their brand stories used in
other markets; and, insights for 100% Pure New Zealand2 campaigns. Finally, implications
for Governments, policy makers and institutions looking toward nation building exercises are
expected when the role of brands as active cultural agents of national identity is recognised.
2
100% Pure New Zealand is the ongoing marketing campaign used by Tourism New Zealand over the past 10
years
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CHAPTER ONE ______ INTRODUCTION
8
CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
2 Chapter Two
Literature Review
The chapter that follows reviews three major topic areas pertinent to consumers’ lived
experiences of brands and national identity: brands; self and social identity; national identity.
Preceding these topics is a brief exposition of foundational concepts that underpin this study.
The review aims to summarise relevant literature and demonstrate the need for further
research into the role that brand experiences play in national identity, and in the
understanding of brands as experiential entities in the context of the ongoing creation of
national identity. Two existing models that are pertinent to understanding social negotiation
of brand meaning and symbolic projects of the self (as they relate to brand consumption)
provide a framework for the development of the study of brands as they affect national
identity. The chapter closes with a statement of two research questions.
2.2.1 Consumers
In this thesis the term consumer is conceptualised as a positive construct, building on the
assertion that consumers are people who live in a specific social and historical situation “in a
co-dependent relationship with commercial culture” (Cova, Kozinets, and Shankar 2007,
p.4). A broader conceptualisation of consumption, beyond the narrow, reductionist logic of
the market, posits that consumers consume in a ‘lifeworld’ and social space beyond the reach
of the market (Firat and Venkatesh 1995). The consumer is understood as the co-creator
(producer and consumer) of symbols, meanings and experiences through activities such as
viewing, consuming, producing and recreating within their social milieu. Cova et al. (2007,
p.4) also suggest that “consumers are consumers in that they primarily take commercial
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
identities as important parts of themselves and their collectives, that they use these identities
to relate to themselves, to other people and to the world around them.” This
conceptualisation of the consumer, not constructed by the market, but as an active constructor
within society underpins the literature review and the research questions which follow.
Various dimensions of this conceptualisation are captured in more detail in later sections of
the literature review.
Insights into advertising and communication were obtained from cultural anthropology when
McCracken (1986) advanced the view that advertising works by bringing the product and a
representation of the culturally constituted world together in an advertisement. In his
theoretical account of the structure and movement of cultural meaning McCracken (1986)
suggested that meaning flows to goods and on to the consumer aided by advertising and the
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
fashion system. The advertising viewer completes the work of the advertising producer and is
the ‘final author’ of the brand advertisement (McCracken 1986), acting as bricoleur (Lévi-
Strauss 1962). This type of thinking and development of ideas involves manipulating and
making resourceful use of materials, irrespective of their original purpose. In summary, the
meaning and interpretation approach is especially insightful because it moves away from the
notion of information and stimulation (McQuarrie and Mick 1996).
Later studies of advertising audience competency and literacy highlighted other weaknesses
in traditional models of advertising. The model of advertising literacy proposed by Ritson and
Elliott (1995) suggests that viewers work with advertisements to produce their own
interpretation that may not exactly mirror the intentions of the advertiser. In particular, Ritson
and Elliott (1995, p.1036) present a view of the advertising audience “as not passive,
homogenous receivers of ads containing pre-specifiable, intended meanings but as active co-
creators of meaning who display an ability to read, co-create then act on polysemic meanings
from ads that they view”. The viewer is not given meaning but actualises the meaning
(presupposing that they make assumptions and have the knowledge to make texts
meaningful) (Mick and Buhl 1992). Furthermore, from one advertisement may emerge
multiple different interpretations, experienced by individuals as they consume ads on
different occasions or, by different audience groups as they employ relevant and specific sub-
cultural knowledge (Puntoni, Schroeder, and Ritson 2010). The process of advertising
meaning co-creation, mediated by the influences of the individual and social realm (including
the editorial or programming media context), is dependent on the person’s unique life
experiences and plans and the uses a person has for the interpreted meaning (Mick and Buhl
1992; Puntoni et al. 2010).
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
irreconcilable” (Grenz 1996, p.35) and blurs boundaries between times and places. With so
much personal and contextual variation, it is clear to see how consumer experiences and
interpretations of advertising are idiosyncratic and uncontrollable.
In this thesis advertising is conceptualised not just as a type of communication that does
things to people, but as a narrative and visual cultural resource that people do things with—
that they consume. Most importantly, consumers have a use for, and an engagement with
advertising, based on conditions independent of the advertising medium and the creative
strategy. In the past brand advertising has commonly been conceptualised as a highly
motivated type of communication designed to enhance sales of certain products or services.
Much of the marketing literature has focused on individuals perceived as customers.
Advertising researchers have studied consumer responses to advertisements as if people were
without identities and whose sole purpose in interpreting advertising was to judge brands
(McQuarrie and Mick 1992). However, as Ritson and Elliott (1999, p.274) suggest,
“irrespective of its managerially relevant role as a promoter of products, advertising
represents a phenomenon that is often consumed in its own right and its exploration and
conceptualisation should be regarded “as an end in itself” within consumer research
(Holbrook 1995, p.15)”. Nevertheless, relatively few researchers have studied consumers of
advertising as interpreters with non-purchase intentions (Folkes 2002). In summary, brand
marcoms are interpreted and used by people in their own ways for their own purposes.
“Branding is a core activity of capitalism” (Holt 2006b, p.300) and brands are central to
scholarship in marketing. Yet, there are calls in the literature for a greater understanding of
brands (Ballantyne and Aitken 2007; Brodie et al. 2006; Jevons 2007). As Keller (2003) and
others suggest, there are significant gaps in our knowledge of branding. The section that
follows provides a general overview of branding scholarship with the aim of exposing the
dominant foundational concepts. It is followed by an analysis of contemporary perspectives
on brands, with particular emphasis on brands research that has a consumer rather than
managerial orientation. Overall this brands section highlights that the branding literature is
underdeveloped with respect to consumer experiences of brands, and is especially lacking in
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
studies that consider consumers in a social context (including, interacting with their viewing
companions, as discussed by Puntoni et al. 2010) rather than the more commonly studied
individual context.
Firstly, what are brands? As the New York Times headlined recently, brand can be a noun
(Google), an adjective (Google search engine), or more powerfully, a verb (to Google)
(Cohen 2009). Marketing practitioner definitions of brand typically rely on traditional
producer economics concepts of reputation signals; for example, the American Marketing
Association (2005) defines a brand as “a name, term, design, symbol, or any other feature
that identifies one seller’s good or service as distinct from those of other sellers”. This
underpins the ideas of differentiation and brand equity, and the concept of brands as valuable
assets to be managed. Other disciplines approach the study of brands from different angles;
sociology—brands as trust mechanisms; psychology—brands as heuristic frames; and cultural
disciplines—brands as symbols (Holt 2006a).
The scope of branding is extensive. Brands are ubiquitous. The concepts of brands have been
applied to goods and services, organisations, people, places, events and ideas, in both profit
and not-for-profit settings. Along with fast moving consumer goods, charities and cities,
branding has also been utilised by individuals—Tom Peters (1999) coined the term Brand
You when writing about the ‘employee self’ gaining competitive advantage and surviving in
the changing labour market. Yet, despite being pervasive, brands are not usually considered
to affect society in any significant way. Certainly, brands are not commonly credited with
contributing to productive and enabling forces within society, and in the popular media little
is heard about any positive contributions that brands make to society in general.
The concept of brands has evolved since it was first introduced into the marketing literature
in the early 1900s (Merz, He, and Vargo 2009). Various marketing scholars have offered
classification schemas addressing the components of brands, and definitions of how brands
are conceptualised in the literature (see, for example, Jevons 2007; Merz et al. 2009; Stern
2006). An abridged version of the summary of brand eras, relevant literature, and
fundamental ideas constructed by Merz et al. (2009) is provided in Table 1 below. As this and
other classification systems suggest, there is broad agreement on brands having dimensions
13
CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
that are functional and symbolic, with the label of ‘psychological dimensions’
accommodating most of the other constructs. The sub-sections that follow outline key brand
dimensions using this three-part rubric.
Table 1. Abridged Summary of Brand Eras, Relevant Literature, and Fundamental Ideas
(source, Merz et al. 2009, p.331)
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
in the marketing context. Brand also fulfils a role certifying product functionality—for
example Intel inside provides assurance that computer systems which carry the brand are
powered by the latest technology. A linked role of brands is to provide a sustainable means of
communicating values and consequently, to maintain competitive advantage over the long
term (Jevons 2007).
The meanings assigned by consumers to brands perform a major function in key social and
psychological activities. Consumption is essentially a symbolic activity (Douglas and
Isherwood 1979) and brands are consumed, in part at least, for the role they play in mediating
and communicating meaning such as identity formation, the maintenance of kin relations,
belongingness and class structure (Jackson 2004). This type of social signalling, as
manifested by conspicuous consumption, was first reported by Veblen (1899/1998). He noted
that the social significance represented by using, wearing or eating/drinking a product
overshadowed the traditional use value. Symbolic social signalling can also be observed in
everyday activities, such as drinking a favoured brand of beer with friends (Pettigrew 2002)
and in consumption rituals, such as those observed at special occasions like weddings (Otnes
and Scott 1996). Image management through consumption is maintained through scripted
behaviours that hold special meaning for the participants and unique consumption practices
ranging from gift giving to the use/wearing of particular brands, objects and clothing (Otnes
and Scott 1996).
The brands and goods one consumes help define the self and therefore can help in the quest
to be someone different and to be part of a group (Schouten and McAlexander 1995). The
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depth and power of a consumed brand’s symbolic meaning within a social group can be seen
when teenagers insist on wearing particular branded trainers that symbolise their desired
personality, characteristics and reference group affiliation (Chaplin et al. 2005; Elliott 1994).
Car brands have highly developed symbolic meanings that confer a sense of social status,
sexual prowess, personal power and freedom on the car owner/driver (Jackson 2004).
Similarly, in sub-cultures of consumption, including the often cited Harley-Davidson owners
group (HOG), brand consumers authenticate their identity by performing a role and sharing
experiences within a particular community of consumption (Schouten and McAlexander
1995).
The phenomenon of brand community, as theorised by Muñiz and O'Guinn (2001), has
become one of the most widely reported and influential studies in marketing and consumer
research in recent times. Brand community is conceptualised as being a special type of
community based on social relationships that arise as the result of shared attachments to a
brand (Muñiz and O'Guinn 2001). Groups of individual consumers who have similar
experiences and emotions, and form some kind of interconnected community, have also been
referred to as postmodern tribes (Cova 1997). A more detailed discussion of communities and
the linkages between individuals fostered by brands is presented later in this chapter.
The symbolic properties of brands and non-branded goods are not stable because meaning
evolves according to context. Consumer researchers indicate that the meanings consumers
ascribe to brands are not just the result of a projected brand identity (Ligas and Cotte 1999;
Muñiz 1997; Oakenfull et al. 2000; Underwood 2003); there are differences across social and
geographic locations so that “brands become inscribed with the local meanings associated
with a community or social grouping” (Kates and Goh 2003, p.60). Kates and Goh (2003,
p.66 ) illustrate this fact, noting that Harley-Davidson “is consumed by multiple social
groupings—Dykes on Bikes, Outlaws, Rich Urban Bikers and Moms and Pops”—that realise
different brand images and inscribe different meanings on the brand. In referring to studies of
gays and lesbians, Kates (2006) further asserts that brands can assist communities other than
those whose focus is consumption, helping in the outward expression and celebration of key
values. Brand meaning evolves through interaction with others in a community, by way of a
variety of social and institutional processes and relations.
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Much academic research on consumers and brands addresses the psychological role of brands
and the mental processes and behaviours that relate to brands. In this context brands are
conceptualised in a number of ways—as a short hand, simplifying device or heuristic cue
(Maheswaran, Mackie, and Chaiken 1992) to assist the establishment of relevant memories
and associations (Keller 2003), which ultimately reduce consumer risk during selection and
purchase processes; as entities that aspire to attain exclusive, prominent and positive meaning
(Kapferer 1997) that influence the minds of buyers (Nedungadi 1990); and as a means of
value creation and delivery. Brands are mechanisms through which consumers form a sense
of trust and belonging (Arvidsson 2005). Other psychological dimensions of brands include
the concepts of brand equity, brand personality, brand image, brand identity and brand
relationships and these are discussed next.
The term brand equity has been used in the advertising industry since the 1980’s to denote the
value consumers place on a brand relative to others (Barwise 1993). Aaker’s (1991) landmark
article outlined five components of brand equity—brand loyalty, name awareness, perceived
quality, brand associations in addition to perceived quality, and intellectual properties such as
trademarks etc. High levels of brand equity may reflect the ability of a mature brand to spawn
successful brand extensions (Aaker and Keller 1990). From a financial point of view, brand
equity is a measure of the value of a brand to a firm, arising from positive associations and
consumer recognition (Aaker 1992). Although brand equity is intangible, it may be assessed
according to relatively higher selling prices (and lower price sensitivity) compared to
competitors, and/or measures of positive attitudes. Brand equity research generally avoids
any consideration of the ways that brands are appropriated by consumers for their own
purposes.
Brand personality sums up the unique interior psychological traits of a brand as if it was an
animate being (Stern 1993). Marcoms and packaging reveal what kind of ‘person’ a brand
would be if it were human. The quality of the connection a consumer has with a brand-as-
person depends on the personality of the brand—the personality provides depth, feelings and
liking to the relationship (Aaker 1996). Since contact with others plays an essential part in the
lives of consumers, a brand with a distinctive personality might play some useful part in
meeting human needs for connections. The brand as a friend might be exciting and dangerous
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or, like a different friend, staid but utterly reliable. The assumption made by marketing
practitioners is that strong brand personalities foster brand loyalty since friendships imply
commitments; feeling ‘at home’ with a brand engenders a level of ownership and pride
leading to a stronger relationship; deeper relationships imply greater levels of emotion and
trust in a brand.
Consumers develop multi-dimensional and personal connections with brands which impact
on the success of a brand. A logical extension of the brand personality concept is the brand
relationship. One metaphor used to conceptualise the consumer brand connection is the
personal partnership. Fournier’s (1998) landmark paper championed the use of relationship
theory for understanding the roles brands have in the lives of consumers. Fournier
conceptualised a range of one-to-one active consumer-brand relationships, allied to human
relationships, ranging from marriages to obsessive emotional dependencies. She posited that
the metaphor of a relationship is strongest when applied to the perceived goal compatibility
between the two partners in the brand-self relationship. Fournier’s (1998, p.367) interviewees
made sense of their daily life by fostering relationships with brands that satisfied “abstracted,
goal-derived and experiential” needs.
An alternative metaphor for the relationship and interactions between brands and consumers
was proposed by Heilbrunn (1995), who explored the role of brands as characters, equivalent
to dramatis personae in literary texts. His work, based on the brand personality literature,
suggests that the various stages of interaction and experience with a brand operate like
narrative in a story, where the role of the brand is, for example, as a hero or helper to the
consumer. An extension of the notion of brand-as-a-character is embedded in the concept of
the ‘lovemark’, where consumers have emotionally charged connections with brands, that
are, like romantic relationships, mysterious, sensual and intimate (Roberts 2004). Consumers
not only trust the brand, and forgive its failings but they feel loyalty beyond reason
(Beckmann 2006).
Brand image is a term that, according to several authors (Dobni and Zinkhan 1990; Reynolds
and Gutman 1984), refers to a variety of understandings regarding the mental picture the
consumer has of the brand. Early studies used the term interchangeably to refer to brand
symbolism, meanings or messages, cognitive or psychological elements of the brand and the
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personification of the brand. However, the various constructs of brand image and brand
personality are poorly conceptualised and operationalised, according to Azoulay and
Kapferer (2003), and are merely part of a larger, more broad-reaching construct of brand
identity. Azoulay and Kapferer (2003) proposed a model of a six sided prism to represent
brand identity, with the internal and external facets incorporating physical qualities,
personality, culture, relationships, reflections and self-image. However, such models, which
have emerged from researchers focused on brand strategy and management, do not account
for the role of brands in consumer lives.
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attention to branding. One of the basic ideas of S-DL is that the customer is always a co-
creator of value, in contrast to traditional views that value is created in the manufacturing
process and embedded in a good. Jones (2005) builds on this and addresses the realisation
that brand value is a diverse construct derived from a variety of important relationships with
stakeholders, such as distribution partners, suppliers, employees, managers, governments,
NGOs, media, consumers and competitors, and affected by public opinion.
In critiquing Vargo and Lusch’s thesis, Schembri suggests that the S-DL is underpinned by
“rationalistic philosophy, which inadequately accommodates the experiential meaning of
services for consumers” (Schembri 2006, p.381). She goes on to propose that researchers
should focus on the customer’s experience as a starting point for a new service orientation
within marketing (Schembri 2006). In an even more broad ranging assessment of the S-DL,
Peñaloza and Venkatesh stress that value is “constituted by marketers and consumers in their
activities and discourses via an enacted process, a social construction that takes place prior
to, during and after the actual exchange and use(s) take place” (2006, p.303).
In summary, two points arise from this sub-section: 1) the brand value creation perspective
does not impact significantly on the issues of brands and national identity central to this
thesis. 2) brands and markets are both socially constructed and the socially situated
experience of brand consumption is a research area worthy of further examination.
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experiences in a Santa theme park in Finland (Haahti 2003; Haahti and Yavas 2004); flagship
brand stores such as ESPN zone Chicago (Kozinets et al. 2004); tourist experiences of Las
Vegas (Firat 2001); river rafting magic (Arnould and Price 1993); museum encounters
(Goulding 2000). Recent scholarship has also attempted to conceptualise and measure brand
experiences and to distinguish experience dimensions across a range of goods and services
brands (Brakus, Schmitt, and Zarantonello 2009).
In their review of the consumption experience concept, Carù and Cova (2003) note that
experiences of consumption are not one-off, isolated and momentary but occur as an
unfolding narrative, over time—and importantly, a brand can function as a script for this
narrative. Carù and Cova summarise Arnould, Price and Zinkhan’s (2002) thesis on
consumption experience stages as follows:
• The purchase experience, which derives from choice, payment, packaging, the encounter
with the service and the environment
• The core consumption experience, including the sensation, the satiety, the
satisfaction/dissatisfaction, the irritation/flow, the transformation
The role of the brand is not merely functional, symbolic or psychological. Brand is central to
the consumption experience. Earlier in this review the reader was introduced to the role of
consumption in signalling between individuals and to the communal projects of co-creating
brand meaning. Cova (1997) developed this idea further by pointing to the ‘linking value’ of
products and services (and by default the brands that wrap around them); “this refers to the
product’s, or service’s, contribution to establishing and/or reinforcing bonds between
individuals” (Cova and Cova 2001, p.70). In this conceptualisation, brand experiences in
some way permit and support social connections and the building of community. Thus,
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brands are able to unite consumers within communities and to assist them in developing a
sense of belonging; brands impact on identity.
In a stream of work emphasising brand advertising effects, the social consumption and
identity aspects of brand experiences were also articulated by Richard Elliott and co-
researchers (see, for example, Elliott and Wattanasuwan 1998; Ritson and Elliott 1995,
1999). Later, literatures on consumer identity and consumption were drawn together by
Arnould and Thompson (2005) within the catchall of Consumer Culture Theory (CCT). CCT
seeks to unite various theoretical perspectives, and addresses the dynamic relationships
between consumer actions, the marketplace and cultural meanings. Importantly, it adds
weight to the view of brands as resources and conceptualises the ways that consumers forge
feelings of solidarity through the pursuit of common consumption interests. Amongst other
topics, CCT is concerned with:
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Further insights into brands have been gained by consumption researchers with an interest in
brand communities. Muñiz and O’Guinn (2005) used their knowledge of how brand
communities display, use and talk about brands to develop a model of brand marketing
communication. Their aim was to accommodate the fact that “brands take their shape
becoming something negotiated in the space between marketer and consumer. In fact, brands
are meaningless outside a notion of social construction and mediated communication”
(Muñiz and O'Guinn 2005, p.64). Their Social Model of Brand Creation (see Figure 3), based
on Anderson and Meyer’s (1988) Accommodation Theory, recognises the impact of meaning
negotiation with the marketer through larger publics, and develops several existing ideas,
including flow of cultural meaning through advertising (McCracken 1986), co-creation of
meaning through advertising (Ritson and Elliott 1995) and social uses of advertising (Ritson
and Elliott 1999).
Figure 3. Social Model of Brand Creation (source, Muñiz and O'Guinn 2005, p.80)
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One aspect of their model of particular relevance to this thesis is the nature of ‘brandtalk’
between members of a community. Muñiz and O’Guinn’s (2005) emphasis was on
information (true or otherwise) that may have a bearing on brand meaning and the
dissemination of rumours within strong, online brand communities. Word-of-mouth, and
other consumer communications (where people to talk to each other about the experiential
dimensions of products and services), have been recognised as underestimated but highly
influential factors in brand marketing (Hogan, Lemon, and Libai 2004) and research in this
area is undergoing a renaissance. (For an overview of this research area the reader is referred
to recent literature reviews; see for example Brown, Broderick, and Lee 2007; Kozinets et al.
2010). However, talk between consumers facilitated by brands (and brand resources), that
does not have explicit or immediate relevance to marketers has rarely been studied. In
summary, consumer conversations and communally co-created brands and stories that build
on meanings supplied by brand marketers, and used by consumers for their own contextually
relevant reasons, are under-theorised and worthy of further investigation.
Recent research into narrative and persuasion in fashion advertising has offered a new angle
on the variety of consumer experiences derived from brand stories (Phillips and McQuarrie
2010). They strongly argue against the case put by Green and Brock (2000), and provide
evidence that advertisements, just like non-commercial stories, can engender powerful
experiences. However, this storied approach is not quite so new. Barbara Stern and other
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academics studying advertising effects have pointed to narrative as being central to brands for
many years (see, for example, Scott 1994; Stern 1991b, 1993, 1994a). As Twitchell (2004,
p.484) suggests, brands are no more than a cultural “story attached to a manufactured
object”.
Underpinning Holt’s thesis is the assessment that iconic brands have succeeded despite the
best efforts of brand managers to steer them in other directions; those brands lucky enough to
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be ‘worked on’ by creatives with a more highly developed sense of the importance of cultural
stories have been the lucky few, according to Holt (2004). He conceptualises iconic brands as
mobilisers of myths and suggests that only iconic brands can narrate the imagined nation and
have national resonance—“iconic brands help to change culture at a deeper level,
influencing how people understand themselves in relation to the nation’s ideals” (Holt 2004,
p.85). This view downplays the incorporation of national mythic elements in lesser brands’
marcoms, and Holt’s position may be construed, at best, as only acknowledging a secondary,
accidental role for national myths in non-iconic brand marketing campaigns. However, other
researchers have found evidence of national identity myths embedded in brand marcoms—
see, for example, the study of Wal-Mart advertising flyers discussed later in section 2.5.8.2
(Arnold, Kozinets, and Handelman 2001).
Holt (2006a) further developed his thinking on iconic brands, taking a particular view that
brands completely, knowingly and cynically exploit cultural myths, making them their own.
Overall, his work refers to the exception rather than the rule—the result of a study of the
historical records of legendary US brands. However, the same term, iconic brands, is used in
a more general way by marketing practitioners and the popular press. Books such as Made in
New Zealand: Stories of Iconic Kiwi Brands (McCloy 2008) document more than 70 iconic
brands (including some small regional brands that I had not heard of). Similarly, a simple
Google search reveals dozens of New Zealand websites whose brands claim to be iconic;
nevertheless, while well-known and highly trusted, they could not truthfully be classified in
the same category as Holts’ iconic brands—e.g. Apple, Nike, Harley-Davidson, VW, Coke
and Budweiser. This is not just some quirk of the New Zealand market—British brands as
diverse as Waitrose, Oxo, Wall’s, Dunlop Tyres and Opal Fruits are claimed as iconic brands,
although they too would mostly seem to fall short of Holt’s definition.
The dimensions that make brands iconic in common parlance have not been well explicated
in the literature. One type of iconicity comes from heritage brands, those with a heritage story
to tell, such as Swiss watch company Patek Philippe, ‘since 1839’ (Urde, Greyser, and
Balmer 2007). Iconicity, potentially, encompasses those brands each of us grew up with and
recount in stories, as part of our family, cultural and even national heritage (although there is
little mention in the literature of such qualities). This dimension would take into account
consumer and consumption heritage as distinct from corporate heritage. Another term, in
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some ways interchangeable with the popularly understood meaning of iconic brands, is
lovemarks—those highly loved and respected brands referred to earlier. Certainly, many lesser
brands which are commonly labelled iconic can be found on the official lovemarks lists at
http://www.lovemarks.com/. In summary, Holt documented the mythic narratives and
cultural connections of legendary brands, but there is still much to be learned about consumer
experiences of the brands that they judge as iconic.
Neither managers nor consumers are the sole authors producing brand meaning (Schroeder
and Salzer-Mörling 2006). Brands are constantly co-created, situated in time and place, and
located within society and culture. Consumers produce socially shared meanings of a brand
(Elliott 1994), and jointly participate with others in generating the experience. Brands play
out in the real lives of consumers in diverse settings and occasions, both for the solitary
consumer and for consumer groups. However, perversely, there is too little brand research
that takes cognisance of the consumer as inherently embedded in a social world and culture—
brand consumers are typically studied as lone actors in a one-woman/man show with no
scenery and few props.
The Brand Culture concept allows that brands of all types might contribute to (and draw on)
national identity. Using this perspective, the reader can be left in no doubt that brands provide
stories and imagery that reflect society and commonly held values, showcasing beloved
geographic locations and personalities, highlighting myths and representations of the way a
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national community is (and used to be), because marcoms draw on existing cultural resources
and utilise the unifying experiences of a nation.
The foundational and current perspectives on brands presented above have highlighted that
the branding literature is underdeveloped with respect to consumer experiences of brands,
and is especially lacking in studies that consider consumers in a social context rather than the
more commonly studied individual context. A clearer understanding of branding issues will
potentially be of real value to marketing practitioners who are still desperate to “improve
their understanding of branding” given the highly competitive, globalising business
environment (Keller 2003, p.595). Researchers have yet to gain significant holistic insights
into how consumers use, feel, think and act towards brands. In the sections of the literature
that follow, consideration is given to other issues that impact on brands—in particular, the
relationship between brands and self/social identity, and finally national identity and the
proposed link with brands.
In this section various constructs of identity, self and community are discussed with the
object of justifying the study of the role of brands in creating and re-creating a sense of self
and belonging. Other important functions of this section are to identify the evolving factors
that shape identity and to provide the theoretical basis that underpins the conceptualisation of
national identity which is introduced in the final section of this chapter.
It is difficult to find widely accepted definitions of the self, although the notions of identity,
ego and self have been the subject of scholarship from Aristotle’s time. Within social
psychology the self is conceptualised in different ways. Distinctions are made between the
personal self and social self, and there are several answers to the question of where the self
comes from. The section that follows reviews self-concept and the personal self, the social
self and social identity theory, narrative, myth, nostalgia and resources impacting identity, a
model of consumption and the symbolic project of the self, and the literature on tribes and
communities as important sources of identity.
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The self is socially constructed; we understand ourselves in relation to others around us, and
because of the similarities or differences between ourselves and others (Mead 1934).
Interaction with a wider range of society presents opportunities for a wider range of the self
to become apparent. Individuals engage in activities and interactions with others in society
and those social experiences are essential to the development and reconstruction of identity;
thus, according to Mead’s (1934) perspective, self-concept is not static. The idea that a
person’s identity shifts across time—which features in the dramaturgical perspective offered
by Goffman (1959/2006)—also implies that different social identities provide
individuals/actors the possibility of taking on roles and identities that suit the circumstances,
depending on the salience of any particular social identity.
In simple terms, the social self takes into account the social groups a person belongs to and
the personal self can be considered as the idiosyncratic aspects of the self (Tyler, Kramer, and
John 1999). At the most basic level, personal identity may be conceptualised in terms of I/me
unique criterial attributes and self descriptions (e.g. birth date, name, uniquely recognisable
voice and body) and self diagnosed adjectival traits (e.g. loyal, quick-witted and tall) relating
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to interpersonal characteristics, values, abilities and physical features (Turner 1984). Social
identity (we/us) is based on the internalised awareness that one belongs to a group. The social
self encapsulates all relevant categories of group membership, ranging from sports and social
clubs, political interest groups, occupational, organisational, family, neighbourhood, caste,
tribal and ethnic groupings to national groups. This list incorporates both interpersonal and
collective identities, where the bonds between people may range from the personal e.g.
family, to the more impersonal e.g. national groups (Brewer and Gardner 1996). Individuals
generally desire to enhance their social selves; group membership is important to healthy
psychological functioning (Simon 1999). However, it must be noted that social selves also
encompass membership of low status, disadvantaged, stigmatised and minority groups.
Social Identity Theory (SIT) (Tajfel and Turner 1979) was developed to understand
intergroup discrimination. It assumes that membership of multiple social groups is possible
and this leads to the existence of not one, ‘personal self’, but rather several selves. According
to SIT there is an individual-based perception of how we/us is defined in relation to any
internalised group membership. Self-categorisation theory (Turner et al. 1987) suggests that
when individuals define themselves in terms of shared group membership they redefine
themselves, moving away from unique and individual attributes towards more shared and
collective stereotypes. Individuals participate in a process of self-comparison (not merely
interpreting reflections from others) but looking for similarities and differences between the
self and the in-group. Individuals consequently favour the in-groups they belong to in
contrast to the out-groups that they do not belong to (Tajfel and Turner 1979).
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Individuals adopt, manage and negotiate multiple, contextually relevant identities. Taking up
these identities provides stability and flexibility to fit in to different situations and the means
to maintain a sense of belonging in diverse contexts. For example, this is demonstrated in the
strong attachment to city and regional identities connoted by demonyms such as Londoner,
Southlander and Hoosier (from Indiana). The processes of identity modification that are
undertaken by individuals are of relevance and interest to marketers for a number of reasons;
they are reviewed in this section.
Firstly, the concept of ‘possible selves’ (Markus and Nurius 1986)—what we might
become—provides an explanation for the integration of brands into one’s self concept
(Escalas 2004) and for choices of products or services on the basis of their role in creating
hoped-for selves and avoiding feared selves (Patrick, MacInnis, and Folkes 2002).
Discrepancies between an individual’s multiple possible selves provide incentives for future
behaviour. Secondly, the assertion that any action or cognition which improves social identity
will also likely improve self-image has implications for purchasing products that have a
social-symbolic role. According to Dittmar, Beattie and Friese (1995, p.507), “by displaying
a recognised masculine symbol, such as strutting around in a black leather motorbike suit, a
young man can compensate for not feeling ‘masculine’ enough. He uses the object to tell both
himself and others that he is indeed ‘masculine.’” This kind of ‘symbolic self-completion’
(Wicklund and Gollwitzer 1982) is central to maintaining self-identity.
Symbolic self-completion refers to the use of whichever suitable symbolic resources are
available to help maintain and develop an acceptable self—acceptable both externally and
internally (Jackson 2004). Jackson also draws together evidence from the literature and posits
that the range of resources available for this continuous project includes the symbolism
attached to certain occupations and skill sets, mythical social roles and narratives, and the
consumption of material goods.
The process of creating, maintaining and revising various selves has been called by Giddens
(1991) the ‘reflexive project of the self’. There is an ongoing to and fro process of
constructing and re-negotiating identity which Jenkins (1996) calls the internal-external
dialectic of identification. Jenkins’ thesis, building on the foundational sociological and
social anthropological works of Mead, Goffman and Barth, is that the “self is an ongoing,
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simultaneous synthesis of (internal) self definition and the (external) definitions of oneself
offered by others” (Jenkins 1996, p.20). However, of even more importance to my study is
the extension of Jenkins’ thinking about the highly interactive process of self identification.
In later work, Jenkins (2004) extends his thesis by suggesting that things, as well as other
people, influence the project of the self.
One of the things that influence the project of the self is consumption of brands. Brand
marketing communications potentially provide a fresh and self-replenishing reservoir of
symbolic resources, both for the construction of identity and the negotiation of symbolic
meaning within communities. The interplay between identities and brands is addressed by
Elliott and Wattanasuwan’s (1998) model of ‘Consumption and the Symbolic Project of the
Self’ built on Jenkins (1996) original work; brands are conceptualised as symbolic resources
used in identity projects. Lived experiences of brands (brand purchase and usage experiences)
and mediated brand experiences (brand advertisement and other marketing communications
consumption) both play a part in the symbolic project of the self.
Behavioural
Lived experience
Signification
Brand Purchase
& Usage
Concretised meaning
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The model conceptualises brands as symbolic resources that impact on the individual self
and, depending on personal contextual factors, may contribute to the identification and
realisation of social selves through conversations. Elliott and Wattanasuwan’s model is
shown in Figure 4 above.
The strength of Elliott and Wattanasuwan’s (1998) model is in acknowledging the integrated
impact of brand stories (provided by marketing communications) and supplementary brand
consumption experiences on personal and social selves. What this thesis seeks to do, is to
concentrate on one part of their model, taking into account the social uses aspect of
advertising (Ritson and Elliott 1999), and focusing particularly on brand consumption
experience that impacts on the social self. The idea is to further explore the brand fostered
‘communitas’ (Arnould and Price 1993) generated between those with shared social selves—
Cova (1997) calls this ‘linking value’—as a result of various brand consumption experiences.
Such an approach would extend understanding of brand impact on the social self, taking into
account the conceptualisation of the social self as shared, consensual and normative,
independent of the personal self. Brands may directly impact on ‘others’ and on the formation
of one’s social identities without being experienced firsthand by the personal self.
Personality psychology suggests that life stories, integrating “the remembered past, the
experienced present and the anticipated future,” (Baumgartner 2002, p.286) are one of the
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Identity is impacted by changes in the socio-cultural context and the way that identities are
mythologised. In particular, the way that the past is constructed and reconstructed through
“the efforts of advertisers, brand strategists, tourist promoters, and other marketing agents”
(Thompson and Tian 2008, p.596) has a role to play in influencing identity. Commercial
activities may offer nostalgic and revisionist views of the past, celebratory connections to a
by-gone age and re-affirmations of traditions, providing narrative resources for identity
projects. Thompson and Tian (2008) focus on the influence of magazines (and their editors)
in the diffusion of identity myths. They highlight competitive, historical and ideological
influences that shape the telling of regional identity stories in their analysis of commercial
mythmaking in the (US) South. Such mythmaking extends into commercial and artistic
endeavours of all sorts, including movies, television programming and advertising. These
activities and resources which impact on the construction of popular memory (and are
implicated in identity projects) are discussed in more detail in the sub-sections that follow.
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they internalise them and fashion them into their personalities, philosophies and sources of
action” (Levy 2006, p.459).
Brand narratives are a resource for reinforcing identity and building communities. Through
their various marketing communications, brands tell stories and articulate loosely constructed
thoughts about the brand (Elliott and Wattanasuwan 1998). Brand narratives operationalise
identities that are recognisable to viewers, such as the confessor, teacher or dramatic
character (Stern 1991b). Stories provided by a brand may help consumers construct the story
of their own lives and thus, help them construct their identity(s). The social function of brand
narratives is powerful—a function recognised by the advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi,
who suggest on their website, “Stories build community. Stories create communities, bringing
the listener and the storyteller together as well as the community of listeners. The smart way
is to change the value of the product by telling a story about it” (Stark 2003, p.1). The
inferences drawn and the characters employed in brand narratives may be incorporated in
consumer lives and used for purposes unrelated to the advertised product or service.
Cultural myths and narratives provide the foundation for traditional stories, contemporary
movies, television programmes and other texts including advertising. Holt (2004, p.57) refers
to the US national ideology conveyed through various American myths which feature in film,
music, politics and commercials, such as “the self-made man, the frontier and the melting
pot.” Myths appear in consumer narratives about consumption experiences—such as
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individual evaluates the past impacts on how they evaluate the way they are and the way they
were. Personal nostalgia (Stern 1992a), the content of an individual’s memories, what they
remember about their personal past and their point of view/perspective on the past, has
implications for how the past affects the present (Wilson and Ross 2003). This type of
nostalgia is autobiographical and refers to the way I was—a somewhat idealised and
exaggerated “"personal best" portrait of the self ” (Stern 1992b, p.389). Nostalgic views of
the past are typically used to create favourable views of present selves and circumstances.
Understanding one’s roots gives a perspective on where one is now.
Intertwined with personal nostalgia is what Stern (1992a) calls historical nostalgia. This
relates to views of “the way ‘it’ was” (Stern 1992a, p.13)—that is, events, times and places
that are personally unknown. Advertisers evoke the shared past using archival materials and
recreations of easily recognised scenes, relying on the audience’s imagination to complete the
story—see, for example, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AEHFBfVGvrI&feature=related,
Holden Ute Evolution television commercial (TVC) where the car and setting in semi-rural
Australia (circa 1951) move through the years and morph into a contemporary model utility
vehicle in an urban context. These nostalgic stories provide an opportunity to remind viewers
how their identities have evolved as individuals, families and as a nation. Consumers of such
historical constructions use them to locate social selves within a long term context by
comparing then and now, who we were and who we are now (where we might be ‘working
class men’ or any other social/group/community identity).
Tribes and communities are social groups that help define an individual within society; the
concepts of tribes and communities are logical extensions of the concept of self identity.
Communities and tribes and are commonly referred to in the marketing literature and are
discussed in turn below. Although the traditional use of the word community implies a fixed
location anchored by place, for example a small village community, this is not a necessity.
The term imagined community was coined by Anderson (1983) to describe the sense of
community sustained by imagination where the members are mostly unknown to each
other—for example, members of the Catholic community. An important point is made by
Anderson (1983, p.15) that “the style in which communities are imagined” is the key aspect
in their definition. Community implies a consciousness of kind where there is a collective
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sense of difference from others not in the community. The concept of community is also
underpinned by a sense of solidarity or mutual concern, belonging and freedom from both
injustice and exploitation (Mason 2000). Thus, the presence of shared rituals, traditions and a
sense of moral responsibility characterise communities (Muñiz and O'Guinn 2001).
The types of social selves that are possible, and the communities that one may belong to are
diversifying. Marketplace based collectivities, characterised by dense social networks and
shared interest in brands, products and activities, play an increasingly important role in
people’s lives (Henry and Caldwell 2007). Virtual online communities have developed since
the advent of communication technologies that facilitate social networking through web-
based contact. User driven technologies, such as blogs, and internet platforms, such as
YouTube, Twitter and Facebook, provide a growing opportunity for social interaction and
community building. One critical feature of these new forms of community is that members
opt in and make a choice to belong, unlike more restrictive geographically determined
communities (Bagozzi and Dholakia 2002). Furthermore, unlike explicitly commercial online
brand communities many of these types of groups are based on friendship ties and shared
consumption practices (Bagozzi and Dholakia 2006).
from community perspectives in that it implies non-rational and archaic bonds, and the
existence of shared emotion and passion. This nuanced interpretation designates the construct
of community as simply implying shared interests. In contrast to this, post-modern tribes are
conceptualised by Cova and Cova (2002) as rallying around locality (amongst other things)
and participating in the ‘re-enchantment of the world’ (see Berman 1981; Maffesoli 1996).
While national tribes are not referred to in the literature, it is possible to envisage such
entities. Certainly, New Zealanders are loosely united in an almost spiritual celebration of
their raw, powerful landscapes and a passion for their fantastic, primitive, natural world
(which featured as Middle Earth in the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy).
The ability to establish and re-create one’s identity and to make choices about which
communities to participate in, is central to the views on questing for self and community held
by Arnould and Price (2000). With so much travel, easy international communication,
migration and opportunity to work and study abroad, individuals of today potentially have
complicated issues of identity, with global cosmopolitan trans-nationality and flexible
citizenship unlike any generation before them (Chan 1998). Making choices about which
tribal and community identities are attractive, and which ones are congruent with self-identity
may be amongst the most important decisions made by an individual. Tribes and community
are important facets of social identity and useful units of analysis for consumer researchers.
In this section a link has been established between brands and the drive to establish identities.
Consumer culture necessarily implies a role for brands in creating and re-creating a sense of
self and therefore personal purpose and belonging. Brand generated narratives, myths and
nostalgia have been shown to shape identities. Research has begun to illustrate the use and
integration of brand resources into an individual’s self concept and the creation of hoped-for
selves. Tribes and community have been introduced as important units of analysis for
consumer researchers. While the use of brands in providing a link between community
members has been proposed, the relationship between brands and particular types of
community/social identity, such as national identity, has yet to be fully accounted for.
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
The power of mass media to both constitute nations and draw communities together is widely
accepted in cultural studies, political science, journalism and mass-communication literature
(Askew and Wilk 2002; Frosh 2007; Millard et al. 2002; Moreno 2003; Prideaux 2009).
These researchers are in no doubt that advertising produces nationalism and informs the
process of conceptualising a nation. In essence, other literatures suggest that advertisements
contribute to national identity. However, researchers in consumer research and marketing
have not yet investigated the logical extension of this argument; that is, if brands typically
sponsor such advertisements, then how do brands affect national identity?
National identity is a term which has entered the lexicon in modern times (since the
development and conceptualisation of nation in the 18th and 19th centuries) and is used
indiscriminately to mean all sorts of things. Before continuing, definitions of nation are
tabled to illustrate the richness and diversity of this construct in the literature.
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
Two things constitute the soul, the spiritual principle [of the nation] – one is the past, the
other the present. One is the possession in common of a rich legacy of remembrances;
the other is the actual consent, the desire to live together, the will to continue to value the
heritage which all holed in common (Renan 1882)
A nation is an imagined political community [that is] imagined as both inherently limited
and sovereign. Nations are distinguished from each other by the stories they tell
about themselves. (Anderson 1983)
Two men are of the same nation if and only if they recognise each other as belonging to
the same nation (Gellner 1983)
A socially mobilised body of individuals, believing themselves to be united by some set
of characteristics that differentiate them (in their own minds) from outsiders (Haas 1986)
A named human population sharing an historic territory, common myths and historical
memories, a mass public culture, a common economy and common legal rights and
duties for all members (Smith 1991)
Any sufficiently large body of people whose members regard themselves as members of
a 'nation’ (Hobsbawm 1992)
A group of people who feel that they are ancestrally related (Connor 1994)
A nation is a community (1) constituted by shared belief and mutual commitment, (2)
extended in history, (3) active in character, (4) connected to a particular territory, and (5)
marked off from other communities by its distinctive public culture (Miller 1995)
A community whose members share feelings of fraternity, substantial distinctiveness and
exclusivity (Tamir 1995)
A collective of people ... united by shared cultural features (myths, values, etc)
(Barrington 1997)
Anderson’s (1983) conceptualisation of the nation has particular resonance in this study. The
imagined community concept (Anderson 1983) recognises the nationally unifying power of
communication technologies (particularly the print media) that allow geographically
dispersed people to feel part of a single, united group. The media provides the means for
circulating the stories that nations tell about themselves, and that distinguish one nation from
another (Anderson 1983). Cultural studies scholars have also considered the nation, with
particular emphasis on television as a site of popular knowledge and the leading resource for
identity projects. However, there are doubts as to whether television can continue to be the
unifier of the nation given the globalising influences on programming (Barker 1999).
While the role of programmes becomes increasingly complex and contradictory (especially in
nations like New Zealand where there are multiple TV channels and relatively little local
content), brand television advertisements (usually chosen because of their suitability for local
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
audiences) may provide some sort of link between members of a nation. Certainly, New
Zealand statistics provided by the Ministry of Social Development indicate that total local
content programming on free to air channels in 2008 was as low as 16% Entertainment, 9%
Children’s, 6% Drama and Comedy; the greatest proportion of local content, at a surprisingly
low 32%, was in News and Current Affairs programming (Ministry of Social Development
2009). While directly comparable statistics were not available to the authors of the MSD
report, they note that data from 1999 indicates 90% local content in USA programming, 55%
(mandated) in Australia and similar figures for many EU members (Ministry of Social
Development 2009). However, industry sources suggest that based on commercial approvals
statistics, 20-30% of television commercials are supplied directly from offshore sources.
While this figure does not account for how frequently those TVCs are aired, it does appear to
support anecdotal reports that point to the predominance of locally commissioned/reversioned
brand advertising on New Zealand television screens. Despite rapidly changing media
consumption habits, television advertising may be a primary resource for nationally relevant
stories.
Within this study national identity is considered a socially constructed phenomenon that
assists the individual to understand his/her place in the world and is characterised by the
belief that there are commonalities which unite members of a nation (Kirloskar-Steinbach
2004). National identity is not just about shared culture; it is about the feeling of belonging
(Grimson 2010). Thus, the conceptualisation of national identity in this thesis draws on the
theories of psychology and sociology, of self concept and collective identity—in particular
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Social Identity Theory, as discussed previously in section 2.4.2. In the paragraphs that follow,
dimensions of national identity that are relevant to this study are teased out.
National identity refers to a shared perception of self within a national group, and necessarily
emphasises similarities and differences between people. de Cillia, Reisigl and Wodak (1999,
p.153) suggest that national identity is a “complex of common ideas, concepts or perception
schemes … of related emotional attitudes … and similar behavioural dispositions ... [that are]
internalised through ‘national’ socialisation”. National identity is a form of collective
identification that serves the purpose of binding people together within a community, giving
them a sense of membership of a group. However, while collective national identity implies
significant commonality, the similarities between members of such a community are
somewhat vague and potentially illusory.
An essential aspect of the concept of national identity is the ability to imagine being part of a
national community (Hunsaker 1999) and self-categorisation is an important facet of national
identity. Jenkins (2004, p.5) suggests that identity is “our understanding of who we are and
of who other people are, and, reciprocally, other people’s understanding of themselves and of
others”. National identity is not a fixed view of tangible characteristics but a self view of the
nation (Connor 1994). It is an act of imagination, such that it is most unlikely that a group of
fellow community members will imagine exactly the same thing—there is “no such thing as
the one and only national identity” (de Cillia et al. 1999, p.154). Thus, within a nation,
alternative national identities develop which may claim to express the same national past but
in fact envisage it in different ways.
popular heroes and heroines, forms of etiquette, styles of architecture, arts and crafts, modes
of town planning, legal procedures ...” (Smith 1991, p.77).
Multiple quests by consumers for local, trans-national and global identities are explained by
the post-modern perspective. Firat and Dholakia (2004) suggest that the chaotic fragmented
lives that people lead give rise to a desire for meaning and substance. “The consumer
transforms from someone who belongs to a culture, society or a lifestyle to someone who
actively negotiates one or more communities—an active cultural constructor” (Firat and
Dholakia 2004, p.10). According to this view, national identity is a dynamic collaboration
between community members that is not reliant on tradition but is built using resources from
the imagined present. It is assumed that people hold multiple identities and utilise each as
required, so that simultaneous membership of nations within nations, ethnic and racial groups
is not discounted. There is no necessity to commit oneself to a single way of being;
individuals take on identities at different times and situations as it suits their needs.
The processes used by a national community in reproducing national identity rely on speech
and language. Ultimately, national identity, as an imagined social identity, is “discursively, by
means of language and other semiotic systems, produced, reproduced, transformed and
destructed” (de Cillia et al. 1999, p.153). Identity maintenance involves conversations,
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Public discourse helps to reinforce national identity when myths are repeated in conversations
and referred to as facts in media discourse. Digital storytelling projects that capture personal
“stories that have previously been shared only with family and friends” (Meadows 2003,
p.190) engender community identity in what Bromley (2010, p.20) develops as “the idea of a
country talking to itself”. In political rhetoric, clichés (which convey taken for granted,
implicit knowledge), careful sentence construction and frequent use of us/we/our helps to
reproduce national identity (Billig 1995). Wodak et al. (2009) studied the public construction
of national identity extensively and noted the importance of officially sanctioned attempts to
unify the nation through narratives of collective forgetting or remembering. This
contemporary fashion of commemoration culture is made visible through anniversaries,
exhibitions and documentaries (Wodak et al. 2009), such as the recent tribute programmes
celebrating 50 years of New Zealand television, the Prime Minister’s annual Waitangi Day3
speech, and museum displays marking the 25th anniversary of the sinking of the Rainbow
Warrior4. Such commemorations generate much news media coverage and serve to retell the
nation’s stories and provide consensual narratives and images of history. New facets of
national identity are revealed in fresh stories and new constructions of history, and through
retellings of common myths in mass culture.
3
Waitangi Day is a public holiday to commemorate the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, New Zealand’s
founding document.
4
The Greenpeace vessel Rainbow Warrior, which had been protesting against French nuclear testing in the
Pacific, was attacked by French agents while moored in Auckland, provoking widespread public outrage.
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The reproduction and negotiation of national identity is a dynamic process that utilises,
amongst other things, collective memories and a shared sense of the past. Halbwachs (1992)
proposed that social groups actively construct and sustain a sense of unity and cohesion by
reproducing collective and cultural memories. Collective forgetting and remembering
involves reconstructing histories that serve to unite the nation and emphasise defining
moments of the past, thus creating a ‘usable past’ (Brooks 1915). More recently, the usable
past has been conceptualised as what we ought to elect to remember, signalling the “desire to
make sense of national experiences in ways that unify rather than separate us” (Carnegie
Council 2001, p.1). Thus, identities change as the usable past changes. Jenkins (2004, p.97)
illustrates this point, suggesting that “to be German now involves emphasising or de-
emphasising different things than being German before reunification”. National identity is
constructed by each individual member and by the group as a whole, and changes over time
as events and experiences are reworked, building and updating perceptions of the community.
The imagined present also figures in reproduction and negotiation of national identity.
Current experiences of reality are used to reinterpret the past and bring it into conformity
with the present (Berger and Luckman 1967). Contemporary visions of reality, depicted, for
example, in locally made television shows such as Shortland Street and Outrageous Fortune,
contribute to national identity. The feeling of belonging and having shared national identity is
reinforced through experiences of everyday life, during interactions with other people,
consumption of mass media, and participation in activities within society. Yu and Kwan
(2008) describe how everyday Taiwanese life experiences, including confrontations with
outsiders such as Dutch, Portuguese, Japanese and Mainland Chinese, have gradually
contributed to two distinct and conflicting ‘national’ identities in Taiwan today—a Chinese
consciousness and a Taiwanese consciousness. The imagined present of ‘them and us’ in
Taiwan, impacts on the construction of self as part of one or other national group.
Acts of community affirmation help define the moving boundaries of national identity
beyond which out-groups belong, and these boundaries are more clearly brought into focus
during interactions with those whose national identity is different. Sociologists have proposed
that there are symbolic boundaries which separate people into groups and generate feelings of
similarity and group membership (Lamont and Molnár 2002) and ‘boundary work’ has
received a lot of attention in studies on identity construction and group commitment
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(Pachucki, Pendergrass, and Lamont 2007). Scholars studying particular types of group
identity construction note that “the main way groups develop strength is through creating
distinct identity” based on the insight that “conflict with outside groups can strengthen the
ingroup” (Yukich 2010, p.173). The mechanisms, rituals and practices by which boundaries
are defended, such as the use of names/labels, consumption of particular symbolic
foods/music/art, participating in group recognised activities and so forth have received
attention in recent studies (Pachucki et al. 2007). However, there are calls for more research
to identify certain types of boundary processes and the conditions under which they occur
with respect to national groups and various other in-group/out-group dyads.
Studies of travel narratives highlight that the experiences of travel offer clarity to the
imagined present; exposure to otherness helps to make national identity visible and more
clearly defined (Bell 2002). In telling travel stories and critically reflecting on home and
abroad “the traveller becomes radically aware of where he ends and all else begins” (Ziff,
2000, cited in Kilbride 2003, p.553). In summary, the literature suggests that national identity
is reproduced, negotiated and sustained in mundane conversations, in public discourse, in
reworkings of the past and in contemporary visions of the present, in popular culture and in
private reflections on otherness.
Compared to those who are born and socialised into a national identity, development of new
national identities necessarily takes on different dimensions for immigrants and their
children. Social Identity Theory (Tajfel and Turner 1979) provides an explanation for why
immigrants are motivated to attain in-group status and national identity in a new country, as
more positive (host) identities boost self-esteem (Phinney et al. 2001). Membership and
acquisition of a new host national identity involves feelings of belonging to, and attitudes
toward, society and confers social resources/advantages and security. Research suggests that
adult migrants do not entirely take on new national identity in their country of settlement
(Phinney 2006). However, those children born to immigrants in a new country typically
assume the host national identity and retain other cultural identities to some extent (Phinney
2006).
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Exposure to mass media is important for immigrants who are learning about a host society,
and such sources are especially used by children to facilitate integration into local youth
culture (Elias and Lemish 2008). Advertising is also theoretically important in acculturation
(O’Guinn, Lee, and Faber 1986) but marketing literature is sparse in this area. There are
studies that consider advertising as a source of information used in acculturation, but they
tend to focus on measuring susceptibility and attitudes towards advertising (see, for example,
Lee 1993). In historical studies of Canadian identity formation since World War Two,
Iacovetta (2000) suggests that food advertisements played a significant role in teaching
immigrant women what Canadian identity was. She identifies the provision of conventional
images of “traditional middle class femininity”, of table presentation, grocery shopping
behaviour, food and recipes that provided a powerful national identity resource for thousands
of new Canadians arriving as refugees or immigrants from Britain and war-torn Europe in the
years after 1945 (Iacovetta 2000, p.15). In the context that Iacovetta studied, it is interesting
to note that Canadians were encouraged to embrace newcomers and teach them Canadian
values and ideals. While it seems entirely likely, there is little published evidence that
confirms that individual members of host societies use advertising as a resource to assist
outsiders in acculturating and to instruct on aspects of national identity.
The processes by which children acquire national identity are still poorly understood and the
literature examining the development of national identity during childhood is sparse. Rather,
studies report either comparative findings, such as at what age a child has knowledge and
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beliefs relating to national identity and prefers his/her own nationality over other specific
national identities (see, for example Barrett, Lyons, and del Valle 2004, p.179), or at a
broader level, investigate identity development and the social self, influenced by both
cognitive-developmental changes and socialisation processes. In general, socialisation
theories suggest that childhood identity development is driven by influences in the social
environment, particularly families, mass media and school experiences. It seems likely that
these contexts and locations play a part in the development of national identity (NID) in each
generation, as discussed in more detail below.
Children hear their parents’ stories and make the stories their own, integrating them with
independent experiences from the community. Irish studies of long-term generational
changes in ethno-national identity illustrate this and point to the sense of continuity provided
by family histories when negotiating changes in identity (Todd 2006). Scholars of children’s
literature have also noted the influential role of parents in national identity development
(Meek 2001). The choice of books read to children (or that children read themselves)
contributes to learning about national identity; for example, Hunt (1992) suggests that myths
of English national identity are sustained by books such as The Wind in the Willows, The
Lord of the Rings and Watership Down. However, it is unknown whether parents use these
stories as the basis for further conversations and commentary on national identity. There is
little research that theorises intergenerational national identity processes as a result of reading
these books.
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There are sporadic accounts in the literature of parents using media in identity and citizenship
projects; for example, Wheeler (2000) reports that in Kuwait “watching foreign programming
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with one’s children gives parents the opportunity to explain why in Kuwait we do things
differently.” Likewise, British researchers have noted the role of pre-school television
animations, such as Postman Pat (Horton 2008) and Bob the Builder, in representing aspects
of national cultures and rehearsing the child in some norms of citizenship (Northam 2005).
However, the most common focus of research in this field is on globalising forces of
communications, media and the arts that are believed to bring a cosmopolitan character to the
world of the child as they develop their identity.
Although research that focuses specifically on children, mass media and national identity is
limited, there is a substantial body of literature on national cinema and construction of the
nation/national identity (see, for example, Hjort and MacKenzie 2000; Kinder 1993; Richards
1997). The term national cinema is used to distinguish the cinema tradition and style of a
country (in contrast with Hollywood and the cinema of the United States). National cinema is
both inward and outward looking, “reflecting on the nation itself, on its past, present and
future, its cultural heritage, its indigenous traditions, its sense of common identity and
continuity ... and asserting its difference ... proclaiming its sense of otherness” (Hjort and
MacKenzie 2000, p. 67). Literature on national cinema is of interest in this study because the
most common type of brand story is the television commercial, a highly compressed filmic
text, which utilises cinematic strategies, devices and techniques. Also, from a practice
perspective, in many countries national cinema and brand commercials are closely linked
since they are often directed, filmed and produced by the same people.
Research into national cinema mostly takes the view that national identity may be
apprehended in the narratives, iconography and recurring motifs of popular culture (Elsaesser
2005). In addressing how national cinema expresses national identity in the French context,
Hayward (2005) proposes seven typologies—narratives (where the narrative is an adaptation
of an indigenous text); genres (certain types are characteristic of particular nations); codes
and conventions (production practices become typical); gesturality and morphology
(intonations, attitudes and postures are rooted in a nation’s culture); the star as sign (actors
embody national cultural codes); cinema of the centre and of the periphery (mainstream,
heartland cinema contrasts with its less conventional, avant-garde and narrow-interest films);
cinema as the mobiliser of both the nation’s myths, and, the myth of the nation (the texture of
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society is reflected in cinema as political, social and economic changes occur). These
typologies, which offer insights into elements of cinematic texts, also provide a useful
framework for analysing television advertisements with respect to national identity. Such a
framework might be beneficial in the analysis of which elements of brands reveal national
identity.
Social identities, such as national identity, are subject to powerful globalising forces and are
reportedly becoming more fragmented, and increasingly disembedded and rootless (Giddens
1991). Stalnaker (2002) and other globalisation commentators argue that national identity is
now almost irrelevant, since many consumers (at least in advanced economy countries) have
an external focus and global outlook. However, globalisation scholars are divided as to
whether there is increasing homogeneity, or perhaps more diversity and/or hybridisation in
identities (Hogan 1999). One view is that the very processes of globalisation are partly
responsible for an apparent increase in the importance and significance of ethnic and national
identities. In a more globalised world, paradoxically, consumers would have multiple
allegiances, simultaneously having a heightened sensibility of national identity (Featherstone
1995) and belonging to a stateless global class of consumer (Levitt 1983). As discussed next,
there is evidence to suggest that this is, indeed, what is happening.
A review of the literature in several specialist journals devoted to the study of nations and
identity, including National Identities, Nationalities Papers: The Journal of Nationalism and
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Ethnicity and Social Identities: Journal for the Study of Race, Nation and Culture, points to
numerous contemporary contexts where national identity is being actively negotiated and is
relevant and important. Furthermore, seminal texts, such as the newly updated Discursive
Construction of National Identity grounded in the Austrian context, show significant changes
in the substance of public and semi-public discourse of national identity as time passes and
circumstances change (Wodak et al. 2009). Many national communities are struggling to
reach agreement and fully develop their collective national identity, unlike the US, whose
people share a binding loyalty to a defined set of foundational, core values (Mitchell 2007).
In various situations national identity is being revised and updated as communities grapple
with issues of colonisation and indigenous populations, recent establishment and linkages
with other nations or economic communities, ethnic diversity and the effects of biases in
immigration policies—included in this are the European Union countries and others once part
of the USSR and Yugoslavia, many African nations and countries such as Australia, Canada
and New Zealand which are part of the (British) Commonwealth. The literature, particularly
in the journals named above, provides strong evidence that national identity is a project of
relevance to many peoples and thus, potentially of significance to marketers as they strive to
understand what is important to consumers.
National identity is a creditable form of identification. National identities are essential for
maintaining self-respect, belonging, a sense of security (Nielsen 1999) and giving people
meaning in their lives. Furthermore, a well developed and strong sense of national identity
has the power to be a productive and enabling force within society, providing positive social
capital, with benefits such as improved cooperation with others, improved information flows
and more effective, better functioning government and other democratic institutions
(Aldridge 2002).
With this in mind, government policy makers in many countries are actively looking for
opportunities of building social capital by way of developing some shared sense of national
identity and common talking points. The ‘Picturing America’ Program made available to
schools and libraries across the United States through the National Endowment for the
Humanities (NEH) is one such initiative. Through this scheme high quality reproductions of
notable American art, including paintings, sculpture, architecture, fine crafts and photography
are used as a catalyst for the study of America offering “insights into the character, ideals
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
National identity is the subject of considerable discussion and debate in New Zealand.
Contemporary popular discourse ranges across a number of views, and a selection of stories
is reproduced below, to illustrate the nature of discussions. Firstly, New Zealand identity is
talked about as becoming more mature, confident and distinct (Keith 2008), although, there is
a sense that “we’re a settler society but nothing is quite settled” (Hill 2010, 13 May). The
Gallipoli campaign5 in World War One is seen as having been instrumental in fostering a
definite sense of New Zealand national identity for the first time (Ministry for Culture and
Heritage 2008). Furthermore, a common view is that, when Great Britain joined the European
Economic Community (EEC) in 1973, and erected trade barriers with New Zealand, this
finalised the break with British identity (Liu et al. 1999). Post-colonial cultural cringe is seen
as gradually receding as New Zealanders start to believe in themselves as a national
community to be proud of (Johnston 2001). Successes in arts, culture and creative industries
(such as film making) have been used as evidence of a distinctive cultural identity, vital for
developing national identity (Skilling 2005). Maori culture is increasingly credited as forming
part of national identity, since it is unique to New Zealand, and the aspect of national identity
most visible to the rest of the world (Ministry of Social Development 2009). Achievement of
any sort in the sporting arena continues to feed the underdog, world beating, feisty, ‘David
versus Goliath’ view of New Zealand national identity. This was evident in the vast amount
of talk surrounding the All Whites team performance in the FIFA (Fédération Internationale
5
The grievous failures of the Allies against the Turkish defenders lead to the deaths of 2721 New Zealanders
and military defeat on the Gallipoli peninsula. This landmark event in New Zealand history is commemorated
each year on ANZAC Day.
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de Football Association) World Cup, and the subsequent offering of a t-shirt through viral
email, emblazoned with New Zealand: The only unbeaten team not to win the 2010 World
Cup. Likewise, the following headline featured in the Otago Daily Times (one of the major
reputable daily newspapers) ‘All Whites’ success could see shift in national identity’
(McNeilly 2010, 22 June) referring to soccer football as possibly upstaging the historical
following of rugby football as a national pastime. In short, national identity is a matter of
interest, and a worthy topic of conversation amongst New Zealanders.
The importance of national identity varies between people and is more heightened in some
circumstances. In this study of brands and national identity, there is no attempt to measure the
relative strength of national identity. Nor is there any critical commentary on the implications
of having strong or weak national identity. It is not the intention to analyse the distinctiveness
of New Zealand national identity or to evaluate the success or otherwise of government
policies to advance national identity projects. New Zealand debates regarding bi-culturalism
and post-colonial effects are not entered into. Contestability and critiques of homogeneous,
singular unified narratives of national identity are put aside for the purposes of this research.
Connotations of strong nationalist tendencies as mechanisms of exclusion and oppression are
not the subject of this study. In summary, national identity is not problematised as a
potentially negative construct. National identity is engaged with simply as an academically
interesting form of social identity, affected by brands, and relevant to consumers in many
parts of the world.
The arguments presented in this section have justified national identity as an important
dimension of contemporary consumer life. Even if national identity is not consciously
activated every day this thesis assumes that it constitutes a significant dimension of the social
self. Communities where national identity is a matter of interest and concern provide greater
potential for the study of brands as a resource for the construction and negotiation of national
identity. By studying national communities that are in the process of developing a confident
sense of identity (for example, New Zealand), researchers might expect to find richer insights
into the issues of national identity construction.
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
Although there are few studies in the marketing literature that claim to be examining national
identity per se, there are a number of loosely connected areas of research, as well as the
extensive country-of-origin and ethnocentrism literature. In the following sections an
overview of some of this literature is provided. However, none of the studies cast much light
on the issues of consumers’ experiences of brands and national identity, and thus, the paucity
of marketing and consumer research directly relevant to this thesis is demonstrated.
There is a reported connection between how a nation is perceived externally and its most
famous brands. Research suggests that brands may be vectors of national image, so that, for
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example, “children [in the US] know Japan as Sony, Nintendo, Hello Kitty and Pokémon”
(Anholt 2005b, p.134). Anholt (2005a) also suggests that ‘brand America’ is substantially
founded on Coke, Disney, Pepsi, Levi’s, Nike and Marlboro. A recent study, published in a
special issue of International Marketing Review devoted to nation branding, also investigated
the use of country names embedded in brand names, such as Mozambique Cellular,
Singapore Airlines and British Paints (Lee et al. 2010). However, this study of brand
preference is conceptually grounded in the ethnocentrism literature and, like the other nation
brand studies, does not contribute anything useful to the question of how consumer identities
are affected by brands.
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suggests that the growth of the retailer Wal-Mart is directly attributable to their deliberate
strategy of symbolically linking the Wal-Mart brand to dominant ideologies of American
life—including imagery of patriotism, notably the frequent use of the Stars and Stripes flag in
advertising material. However, while the flag is easy to categorise as a patriotic symbol,
many of the other powerful elements that Arnold et al (2001) identified might alternatively be
deemed to relate more to the identity of American people rather than the state. The strength
of the Wal-Mart campaign comes from interlinked imagery that is connected with American
life and that extends beyond simple patriotism to a complex blend of cultural values that have
appeal to working class, rural and small town family women.
O’Donohoe found that reactions to particular caricatures of Scottish identity were strong, as
participants disapproved of brands that tried too hard to establish their Scottish credentials
and made glaringly obvious appeals to national pride. Brands whose advertising resonated
well with the participants’ sense of national identity used fewer, more subtle elements, such
as local band music, familiar backdrops and even a native bird (O'Donohoe 1999).
Conversely, a sense of ‘otherness’ was perceived in some commercials, where the pace of
life, the glamour, pushiness and daringness (and high production values) spoke of what the
Scottish identity was not. However, O’Donohoe concluded that the level of Scottish
affiliation varied such that participants were comfortable with generic British or even
European identification sometimes but at other times felt bitterness that Scottishness was
marginalised.
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
Local practitioners believe that overt appeals to national pride and the use of prominent New
Zealand iconography may provide comfort to advertising consumers. Lawrence (1998) posits
that, after exposure to (sometimes) unpleasant reality in the local news, positive New Zealand
brand associations in advertisements restore some sense of national unity and belonging.
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
Lawrence (1998) cites a selection of television campaigns that have a Kiwi6 ‘feel good’ factor
and unashamedly appeal to a New Zealand sense of national pride. While the appeal of his
selected advertisements is obvious, it is my view that other brand campaigns, such as those
employed by low cost general merchandise retailer The Warehouse and do-it-yourself (DIY)
retailer and building material merchant Benchmark Building Supplies also speak strongly of
what it is to be a New Zealander using more subtle means, as implied by Billig’s (1995)
concept of banal nationalism. These subtle means include the use of ethnically representative
talent, ‘the common man/woman’ as non-celebrity endorsers, and minor celebrities (such as
aging local pop stars), use of familiar settings, inclusion of distinctive local vernacular
language, celebration of values such as rugged masculinity, informality, DIY and giving a
helping hand in community activities.
New Zealand national identity is operationalised in a number of high profile brand campaigns
on a level that is more sophisticated than a simple ‘country of origin’ effect in advertising.
Displays of national identity are not limited to local brands seeking patronage justified on the
basis of parochial issues. Brands with a well-known foreign heritage such as Japanese based
Toyota have successfully encapsulated powerful elements of New Zealand national identity
in their advertising campaigns, ranging from the umbrella brand commercials for ‘Everyday
people’ to the controversial Hilux ‘Bugger’ and ‘Bulls’ farm themed advertisements.
Part of the appeal of embedding national identity in advertisements lies in the strong
emotional connections that can be made with viewers and in the ability to demonstrate that a
product is well-suited to the needs of potential consumers. More importantly, the advertiser
can provide both lifestyle and social context that informs the viewer about who they become
when they consume the brand and who the other consumers are (Leiss et al. 1986).
Categories of consumption are made visible through advertising (Otnes and Scott 1996),
therefore national community practices may be demonstrated.
The resonating icons and heroes that drove national pride in New Zealand advertising in 1998
were captured in a commercial research project and linked to six “Kiwi Personality Types”.
This research is presented in Table 3. Future research into New Zealand national identity
6
Kiwi (adj). means characteristic of New Zealand or New Zealanders (Source: NZ Oxford Dictionary)
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might reasonably expect to reveal updated icons and heroes linked to broadly similar Kiwi
identity characteristics.
Kiwi
Personality Dominating characteristic Resonating Icons &
type Heroes
Intrepid Need to be free & liberated Sir Edmund Hillary
Lucy Lawless
Queenstown
Powerful Need to stand out and be seen as a All Blacks
world beater Sir Peter Blake
Auckland
Worldly Want to be effective, informed, Dame Kiri Te Kanawa
intelligent & seen as in control in the Wellington
world
Gentle Want to feel caring, secure, protected Dame Whina Cooper
& safe Koru7
Native bush
Ferns, Kiwi
Family Need to feel part of a community Fred Dagg
Heartland/Gary
McCormick
Easy-Going Seek to feel part of shared experience; Billy T James
sociable & playful BBQ
Auckland or Queenstown
From both brand researcher and practitioner perspectives there are a number of compelling
reasons for taking an interest in national identity. National identity has been shown to be
relevant to contemporary consumers in many places, as discussed earlier. The potential for
brands to contribute to identity projects has already been proposed in the literature, notably
by Elliott and Wattanasuwan (1998). According to the Brand Culture perspective (Schroeder
and Salzer-Mörling 2006) cultural processes affect brands; consumers, surrounded by and in
association with brand culture, co-produce brand experiences and meaning, (re)-creating and
affirming identities (such as a global consumer identity, Alden, Steenkamp, and Batra 1999).
7
Koru is a spiral shape symbolising new life and growth, integral to Maori art
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
The role of brands in creating identities is also developed by Cayla and Eckhardt (2008) who
studied new trans-national identities in the Asian context. Drawing on Anderson’s (1983)
ideas of imagined communities, they investigated the role of brands in creating connections
between people living in different countries across Asia and the shared sense of belonging
and consciousness of a pan-regional identity. While Cayla and Eckhardt’s study is
particularly focused on the brand management activities of regional brands that are trying to
divorce themselves from any specific national connections, it is clear that brands live as
stories in the minds of consumers and contribute to “the range of identities that people can
use to think of themselves” (Cayla and Eckhardt 2008, p.226).
Having established that brands are used by consumers to create identities and that national
identity is an over-arching, relevant and contemporary form of social identity then it must be
assumed that brands also have the potential to contribute resources to that type of identity.
However, a review of trade literature indicates that national identity is an issue that has not
yet been given much consideration in the brand marketing practitioner arena. Furthermore,
there is a gap in the academic literature when it comes to linking brands and national identity.
Published studies to date have not considered the potential of brands as playing a part in
consumer national identity projects or in providing the link between consumers who share
national identity.
The literature reviewed in the preceding sections has been used to inform the primary
research objective of understanding the role that brand experiences play in national identity.
Several important points have been established and gaps in the literature have been identified.
Firstly, there is a paucity of studies that elaborate the role of brands in consumer’s lives and
capture the consumer experience of brands within a social context. Secondly, little research
has been done to theorise the way that consumers utilise brand narratives for their own
purposes. Thirdly, a useful model of brands as resources used in the ongoing project of
construction and updating self and social identity has been proposed in the literature and
warrants further exploration. Fourthly, the desire to create and re-create a sense of personal
purpose and belonging within a group, and the potential brands have to contribute to
community projects has been established. Fifthly, brandtalk and other social processes have
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CHAPTER TWO ______ LITERATURE REVIEW
been alluded to in studies of brands and community but there is little research explicating
exactly what these processes entail. Finally, the significance of national identity as one type
of social identity that draws on brand resources in co-creating community has been identified
as important but remains unexplored in the literature.
Gaps in the literature have been exposed and thus the research questions that this study will
address are now presented in summary:
2. What are the social processes affecting national identity through brand experiences?
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CHAPTER THREE ______ METHODOLOGY
3 Chapter Three
METHODOLOGY
This chapter utilises a particular structure detailing the tools, methods, methodology,
theoretical perspective and epistemology underpinning investigation of the research problem
identified in the literature review. Taking heed of Crotty’s (1998) advice, that in laying out
the justification of a research project one may proceed in any direction so long as the reader
is provided with a useful structure, this chapter generally progresses from specific tools and
methods towards more philosophical issues. After an exposition of the research objectives
and questions, particulars regarding data collection and analysis are described and justified.
From there the reader is provided with a discussion of philosophical issues arising from the
methodology employed, particularly relating to introspection and narrative construction. To
complete the justification of the entire methodology adopted in this thesis, the epistemology
is identified, explained and justified. Finally discussions about research design integrity and
quality measures are presented.
The research objectives and questions that guide this study correspond with the gaps
identified in the literature. At the broadest level, this is a study of consumers’ lived
experiences of brand and national identity or more particularly, how brands affect national
identity. The two specific linked objectives of this study are:
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CHAPTER THREE ______ METHODOLOGY
As the literature review indicates, the role that brand experiences play in national identity has
not been the subject of reported studies. Thus, it is appropriate in this under-developed
research area to guide the study with research questions that are as open as possible and that
allow findings to emerge independently of the researcher’s prior assumptions drawn from the
literature. The research questions are re-stated and explained in more detail below.
This question was fundamental to the overall research objective of understanding the role that
brand experiences play in national identity. As a first step in the project it was essential to
understand which elements of brands reveal national identity. Secondly, it was important to
benchmark contemporary experiences of how national identity is operationalised by brands in
marketing communications. Furthermore, the study has been operationalised in such a way as
to capture consumer experiences of brand communications that both overtly and subtly affect
national identity. The first research question was intended to generate deeper understanding
of specific brand experiences that impact on national identity, the authenticity of such
resources and the degree to which they resonate with brand consumers. Given that the study
has been conducted in the New Zealand context, this question was designed to reveal
experiences of how New Zealand national identity is experienced in brand communications.
The second research question was designed to examine the processes affecting national
identity and the effect of brand experiences on social linkages between consumers (in
particular on shared national identity) as envisaged by Cova (1997).
2. What are the social processes affecting national identity through brand experiences?
It pre-supposes that the personal self is informed by interactions with others and thus,
national identity is comprehended communally and singularly. The question was intended to
generate a deeper understanding of the mechanisms whereby common national identity
meanings are formed by groups of consumers (refer to Muñiz and O'Guinn 2005) and social
identity is affected as a result of brand experiences (refer to Elliott and Wattanasuwan 1998).
Most importantly, it was intended to investigate the group processes of a national community
as they utilise brand stories.
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3.3 Methods
In brief, the research objective of understanding consumers’ lived experiences of brands and
national identity was addressed in this study through a series of activities which included the
generation of autobiographical life-history narratives, depth interviews with friendship pairs
of consumers and the production of co-created narratives in response to familiar television
advertisements, using a hermeneutic approach to analysis and sense making. Inter-connected
communal and singular constructions of national identity were produced by twenty middle
aged female consumers over a period of months. In addition, narratives were produced by
other people acting in various roles, including the researcher and her supervisor; film,
television and media, cultural and advertising researchers who constituted the expert panel;
various advertising industry practitioners; and, friends and colleagues engaged during the
snowball recruiting process. Finally, another type of narrative collection was employed, using
a member checking and follow-up process, where reflections on previously generated
narratives were elicited, adding to the depth and range of experiences available for analysis.
Interviews were digitally audio-taped and transcribed. Subsequent analysis was facilitated
using NVivo8 qualitative data management software.
Details of the methods and tools used in this study are presented next. More complex
dimensions of the production of multiple narratives, contributing to a single overall narrative,
for use in building theory in this project are discussed separately. The section proceeds in
chronological order, starting with advertisement selection and the expert panel phase, and
then progressing to participant recruitment, specific interview techniques and analysis. The
rationale for the choice of method ends this section.
In preparation for evaluating brand advertisement suitability for inclusion in the study
regarding their richness in aspects of New Zealand national identity, the researcher developed
a five point categorisation of New Zealand national identity. The categories derived from the
literature were myths; collective values and rituals; psychological characteristics and national
stereotypes; attachment to place; and popular symbols. In the following discussion the five
interlinked elements of national identity are elaborated and examples of each of the
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categories are provided. These examples represent the ‘second cut’, that is to say, the
understanding achieved by the researcher from the literature, further enhanced through
consultation with another person, the research supervisor, and refined after further personal
reflection.
3.3.2.1 Myths
The first category, myths, informs most of the other categories but stands alone, representing
the well-spring of stories that we (I speak of myself as a New Zealander) tell about New
Zealand identity to ourselves, our children, each other and outsiders seeking a glimpse of
New Zealandness. (New Zealandness is a widely used term, defined by Meredith 1998, as
“who we are as New Zealanders”). These myths may be considered the nation’s foundational
narratives, the ones that are mobilised in national cinema as discussed earlier. Bell (1996)
refers to a variety of inherently positive myths of Pakeha identity which include:
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• Comfortable, liberal, racially harmonious, anti-racist, sports loving people who don’t
make a fuss.
• Rugged masculinity, where men are undemonstrative, suspicious of emotional
attachments, self reliant, outsiders in their own land, and alone in the world, in the
manner articulated in John Mulgan’s (1939) novel Man Alone.
• Communal celebrations are mainly rituals involving males and sport.
Scholars refer to a wide variety of other New Zealand myths in the literature, (see, for
example, Dow 1995; Martin 1989; Morris 2005) including:
• There has been a good state of race relations by world standards, made easy because
Maori were more advanced than other indigenous groups (particularly in comparison to
Australian aboriginals). Maori were conceived as typically happy-go-lucky, friendly,
musical, and non-materialistic.
• Quiet self confidence, with a well grounded, no nonsense “She’ll be right” attitude.
• Wariness of authority and having sympathy for the underdog.
• A community foundation of capable women who deal with all eventualities, exemplified
by farming women who feed the shearers, and individuals such as Sonja Davies, Aunt
Daisy and Helen Clark.
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individual and collective brilliance in problem solving in social and pragmatic spheres
(McCreanor 2005, p.55). One prominent stereotype is the Kiwi bloke whose life is simplified
as loving rugby, racing and beer. Other commonly cited personal characteristics are: good
humoured; quirky sense of humour; prone to understatement; casualness; friendliness; not
brashness, forwardness or pushiness; reticence; self-doubting; emotionally stunted (men)—
tough but soft hearted; capable women—domestic monsters.
Studies of New Zealand self image suggest that conceptions concentrate on landscape and
lifestyle (Bell 1996, p.11). There is an implicit connection between nature and nationality,
and New Zealanders claim a unique identity by way of reference to particulars of the natural
landscape and endemic plants and animals; turning to nature is one way of accounting for
distinctiveness (Bell 1996, p.8). Landscape is conceived of as being romantic and sublime,
and thus man is humbled in the presence of such majestic natural phenomena. Attachment to
and reverence for places is expressed in the following ways: making a place your own—
backyard, neighbourhood, city or region; the bach (a modest holiday home which symbolised
the beach holiday lifestyle that became more accessible to the middle class during the 20th
century, Phillips 2009); ancestral and family places where spectacular scenery is the
backdrop to everyday life; sublime and often untouched world of native bush, snow
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mountains, beaches, rivers, harbours, volcanic cones, farmland; open spaces; clear skies and
sunshine. While New Zealanders are not unique in claiming ‘God’s own country’—this
epithet is also used in connection with Kerala (India), Yorkshire (England), Australia and for
many years in Rhodesia—New Zealanders have an overriding sense of belonging in
Godzone, a sentiment reinforced by Rudyard Kipling who in 1891 epitomised the beauty of
Auckland in the lines “Last, loneliest, loveliest, exquisite, apart.” A contemporary rendering
of this paradise myth is also captured in the phrase ‘a slice of heaven,’ lyrics made famous in
the 1986 movie Footrot Flats.
8
A tiki is a figure in Maori carving representing a human embryo (Source: NZ Oxford Dictionary)
9
Waiata is a Maori song (Source: NZ Oxford Dictionary)
10
Haka is a traditional warlike Maori posture dance with chanting (Source: NZ Oxford Dictionary)
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CHAPTER THREE ______ METHODOLOGY
With the assistance of members of the Communication Agencies Association of New Zealand
(CAANZ), the researcher evaluated a range of television advertisements with a view to
selecting a short list of approximately 20 brand television commercials (TVCs) that may be
relevant to New Zealand identity, either directly or indirectly. The selection was then
assessed by a panel of experts.
After analysing current relationships between agencies and their clients’ brands advertised in
New Zealand, the researcher successfully contacted all of the local advertising agencies
aligned to the top four global advertising groups and a selection of the larger independent
agencies. A total of 16 agencies supplied the researcher with DVD copies of recent TVCs
deemed to have some possible relevance to the project. The selection of possible TVCs from
the agencies’ collections proceeded in several different ways according to what suited the
organisations. This ranged from the researcher gaining complete access to digital archives at
an agency, to meetings and discussions with key personnel about their client list and
suggestions of material that might be suitable, to the researcher requesting material relating to
pre-identified brand campaigns. The whole process was characterised by much goodwill on
the part of advertising agency staff and the researcher gained the cooperation of all agencies
that were approached. 180 unique television commercials representing 73 different brands
were collected.
A short list selection of advertisements was generated using the national identity
categorisation framework, with the intention of generating a selection of advertisements that
offered different signs of New Zealand identity, variation in execution styles, and different
categories of products and services with at least some being non-New Zealand based brands.
The chosen advertisements must have screened in New Zealand, had not been judged in
breach of the Advertising Code, and were intended for adult rather than child audiences. As
this was a study of branding from a consumer perspective, social marketing campaigns,
television programme trailers, political and public service message advertising were excluded
so that the focus stayed exclusively on for-profit goods and services that could easily be
recognised by participants as brands.
An expert panel of three senior Marketing and Film, TV and Media Studies academics was
used to more fully assess the relative strengths and weaknesses of the short listed
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CHAPTER THREE ______ METHODOLOGY
After this selection process had been completed, compilation disks were made by Digital
Media Services in the University of Auckland Business School. In this process the files were
standardised and saved in both DVD video and WMV video format. The advertisements
could then be played on almost any type of PC or laptop computer as required.
A central feature of this study was the deliberate recruitment of participants whose profile
broadly matched that of the researcher. In order to take a more tightly focused approach to
the study of the issues, the research was confined to a study of people who had several
aspects of their life experience in common—namely that they were women, approximately in
the 40-50 year old age group, New Zealand born OR had permanent residency in New
Zealand, spoke English and, most importantly, considered themselves to have a New Zealand
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national identity. However, within these boundaries the study explored the experiences of
various participants in order to capture contrasting views that help define the limits for
generalising the findings (Eisenhardt 1989).
There were both theoretical and practical advantages in using these selection criteria. Firstly,
the participant profile broadly matched that of the researcher, which facilitated openness
during the interviews to some extent, as reported by Song and Parker (1995) who found that
assumptions about the interviewer’s cultural identity may fundamentally affect what
participants disclose and the manner in which it is done. The justification for using women
participants also took into account the literature which suggested that same gender
interviewee and interviewer pairs facilitate personal conversations relating to lived
experiences—although it is over-simplistic to suggest that because of shared gender alone the
interviewer necessarily has a superior interpretation of the participants’ experiences
(Riessman 1991). In his book on focus group research Fern (2001) summarises a number of
studies relating to gender differences in self-disclosure and reciprocity. In particular he
reports that women usually divulge more personally relevant information than men,
particularly relating to interpersonal issues, feelings and personal problems. Furthermore,
because of a tendency to match the level of disclosure of a discussion partner, Fern notes that
all-female focus groups (or interviews) lead to very high levels of disclosure about a topic.
Women have also been found to disclose more to both strangers and acquaintances than men.
In another study Burns, Williams and Maxham (2000, p.185) found that women are more
expressive than men and recommend that “using males exclusively or using a
disproportionate number of males may decrease the richness of the narrative text generated
by these informants.”
At a more prosaic level there was a close fit between the participant profile and the target
market for many brand communications—middle aged household shoppers. Thus, the use of
these selection criteria enhances the value of the study in terms of practitioner relevance.
Since the aims of the study were to investigate brands as they affect national identity in the
New Zealand context, it was essential to recruit New Zealand born or permanent residents
who consider themselves to have a New Zealand national identity. The reason for recruiting
English speakers was an entirely practical one given that English is the mother tongue of the
researcher and 88% of the population in the Auckland region speak English (Statistics NZ
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CHAPTER THREE ______ METHODOLOGY
2006a). Finally, from a cost and convenience perspective there were advantages in
conducting the study in a single geographic region, Auckland, which represents 32.8% of the
New Zealand resident population according to the 2006 census provisional statistics
(Statistics NZ 2006b).
A purposive sampling technique was used in this study because there was a predefined group
sought for the study based on the premise that interviewing those people would maximise
chances of uncovering insights on important experiences of brand and national identity.
Experienced qualitative researchers report that some participants are ‘richer’ than others and
that greater insights and understanding would be anticipated from those people purposively
selected as most suitable for a specific study. Conversely, randomly selecting participants to
participate was unlikely to be very productive in an in-depth small scale study such as this.
There are a number of purposeful sampling strategies that can be used in qualitative research.
Patton (2001) identifies at least 15 such strategies including extreme/deviant case sampling,
intensity sampling, typical case sampling, maximum variation sampling, stratified purposeful
sampling, homogeneous sampling, critical case sampling, snowball/chain sampling, criterion
sampling, theory-based/operational construct sampling, confirming/disconfirming case
sampling, purposeful random sampling, politically important sampling, convenience
sampling, and opportunistic sampling. In this study the goal was to analyse experiences that
were common and typical of the people in a heterogeneous group of society, rather than to
document extreme and atypical experiences. Hence a snowball mechanism was used to
recruit twenty women.
Acquaintances of the researcher were asked to refer a pre-prepared written call for
participants to whomever they considered typical New Zealand women that might be
interested in the study. The researcher suggested that the most suitable women would be
those in the 40-50 age group, living in the wider Auckland region, who were either born in
New Zealand or had lived here since childhood and considered themselves to be New
Zealanders. The potential participants were also required to be prepared and willing to talk
about themselves and their lives. Those who expressed definite interest in participating either
contacted the researcher directly or provided a phone number and asked for the researcher to
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CHAPTER THREE ______ METHODOLOGY
contact them. Each volunteer was asked to recruit another woman, who met the same criteria
as nearly as possible, to make up a friendship pair. During this recruitment process the
researcher screened each of the potential participants during a telephone conversation to
ensure that the people were comfortable and able to take part in an interview and tell their
story. Finally, participants were invited to nominate suitable times and quiet locations for
interviews to take place. None of the participants was known to the researcher prior to the
study.
Snowballing was useful in this context because the technique yielded a sample based on
referrals made by people who shared or knew others who presented the characteristics that
were of research interest. This technique has been successfully deployed before in the social
sciences to study sensitive topics, rare traits, personal networks, and social relationships
(Bernard 2000) and is particularly relevant to a social constructionist epistemology as will be
discussed later. While this research was not concerned with marginalised persons or rare
conditions, the use of snowballing via personal networks and social relationships greatly
facilitated the recruitment of willing and suitable people with strong communication skills to
take part in this study and to generate rich information.
This snowball technique was valuable as a practical means of making contact with people
who met certain criteria and who were articulate and interested in the research topic.
However, it was also useful as a method of sampling in the formal sense, so that a variety of
people, with different consumption philosophies, media usage patterns and ethnic heritages
etc, who represented typical cases but were not part of the immediate social network of the
researcher were sampled. Another benefit of this personal referral technique was that it added
to the credibility and trustworthiness of the researcher. Potential participants knew and
trusted the referees as they in turn vouched for the researcher’s credibility (Ger and Sandikci
2006).
The number of participants in this research was determined as the study proceeded and
comprised 20 women—i.e. ten friendship pairs. According to Patton (2001), within
qualitative inquiry, rules for sample size do not exist. The decision of sample size depends on
several of factors, notably the research question and the purpose of the study, the richness and
variety of experiences captured and what can be managed effectively within a time and
resources (Patton 2001). In this study theoretical and convenience factors prevailed as the aim
was to collect sufficient data that might explain certain theoretical concepts, processes and
events described in the literature. A decision to stop recruitment was made during the study
when no new themes emerged from the interviews—what Glaser and Strauss (1967) and
Strauss and Corbin (1990) refer to as theoretical saturation. This also accords with Spiggle’s
(1994) framework regarding data collection and iterative processes used in analysis and
interpretation of qualitative data in consumer research.
Ethical approval was granted for this research by the UAHPEC in accordance with University
of Auckland regulations, reference number 2008/275. The Participant Information Sheet and
Participant Consent Forms as approved by UAHPEC are included in Appendices 2 and 3.
In recognition of the time commitment required for this study the researcher made $100
donations to charity as nominated by each participant. Each participant was asked to choose a
charity from a list of ten registered charities and was sent a letter verifying that the $100
donation had been made in her name as specified. The purpose of the donations was to show
gratitude to the participants, particularly in view of the time commitment required for the
interviews. (Refer to Appendix 4). It remained the absolute right of participants to withdraw
themselves or their information from the research up to 28/08/09 without giving any reason,
irrespective of whether or not a donation had already been made. Details of these
arrangements were described in Participant Information Sheets as required by UAHPEC.
Refreshments at the interview sessions were provided by the researcher as a simple courtesy
and acknowledgment of the commitment made by the participants.
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A two-part interview method was designed for this study. First, in an initial interview session,
autobiographical narratives were elicited from participants. Individual participants told their
own story of being a New Zealander and the things and experiences that were important to
their New Zealand identity. Biographical narrative approaches have the advantage of
focusing on issues in terms of the implications and experiences of individual consumers with
important findings flowing from detailed analyses of particular life-histories (Firkin 2004).
Part one, where autobiographical narratives were elicited, was intended to generate insights
into self and national identity. In the analysis phase these insights were compared with those
generated in the second part, where participants experienced brands together and discussed
national identity in relation to brand advertising. Thus, inter-connected communal and
singular constructions of national identity were teased apart and examined separately and
together in an iterative process of developing understanding, according to the principle of the
hermeneutic circle which is discussed in more detail in 3.6.1. Both interviews were followed
up with a comprehensive member-checking process, the importance of which is discussed in
3.3.9.2.
The rationale for this choice of two-stage interview method was that a qualitative, depth
interview allowed the topic to be explored openly and allowed participants to express their
experiences in their own words, so that their point of view was able to be understood. The
interview method also offered the researcher pragmatic benefits with respect to time, cost and
convenience compared to ethnographic methods, where prolonged engagements within a
community would have been required.
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The two-part research design provided the means of answering the two research questions:
How do consumers experience national identity in brand communications? What are the
social processes affecting national identity through brand experiences?
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Tell me your story of being a New Zealander and the things and experiences that are
important to your New Zealand identity. Start wherever you like. Please take the time you
need. I won’t interrupt. I’ll just take some notes for afterwards.
This question was intended to prompt an initial narrative. Since the process was unlike other
market research ‘question and answer’ sessions that participants may have been familiar with,
it was sometimes necessary for the researcher to support and encourage people in telling their
story and producing a narrative (Firkin 2004). Once participants had finished their initial
story the researcher then followed up with a series of probes which were structured to draw
out more narratives, focusing on points of interest and clarifying anything that was unclear
with respect to experiences of national identity and fitting into a New Zealander mould.
Firkin (2004) notes that the ongoing interview continues to seek narratives, and questions
should incorporate the actual words of the participant. The interviews concluded with an
invitation for the participants to add any further comments and to reflect on issues that the
interview process may have provoked. At this point the researcher also collected more
detailed demographic data from the participants in the few cases where the information had
not been disclosed during the interview. Refer to Appendix 1 for Interview Guide.
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two-person interviewing include dual interviews, paired depth interviews and joint, conjoint
or dyadic research). There appear to be only three reported studies in the marketing literature
that employ friendship pairs (or any other type of pairing) in studies of adults and these are
briefly discussed. Bayley and Nancarrow (1998) recruited eight friendship pairs for depth
interviews in a study of impulse purchasing. The very close friends included pairs of males
and females and mixed pairs, across a range of life stages. Banister and Hogg (2001, 2004) in
research into negative symbolic consumption recruited 15 same gender friendship pairs, aged
from 18-30 years. Before they participated in loosely structured interviews, each pair of
consumers knew each other to have similar attitudes to clothing, fashion retailers and brands.
In a commercial market research project Hindmarch, Wells and Price (2005) conducted 38
paired depth interviews amongst mothers of babies under one year, regarding experiences of
motherhood and infant feeding practices. Their paired approach was especially designed to
investigate the role played by peer groups in influencing feeding decisions. Apart from the
research reported in the marketing literature there are studies using pairs in the wider
academic business literature—see, for example, the study of multi-generation family
businesses (Hamilton 2006), which used two person interviews to reveal the complexity of
joint experiences and the construction of participants’ understanding of experiences in
narrative terms.
Clearly, the friendship pair interview approach differs from focus group approaches where
strangers (not friends) are recruited, under the assumption that people will speak about an
experience more thoroughly, and self-censor less, when talking among strangers than
amongst those they know. However, the use of friendship pair interviews combined several
advantages—firstly they provided a small social context for participants to experience brands
and national identity. Virtually all previous studies of brand experience investigated
individual consumers isolated from any meaningful social context. In asking a single
consumer about a social experience process a researcher may wrongly conclude that the
social process was being studied, rather than the individual’s experience of the social process.
Secondly, the number of people involved in the discussion was small enough to allow the
researcher in-depth contact with participants and to fully experience interactions and
responses to each other. Furthermore, the presence of two participants helped in accessing the
diverse experiences of each person. Thirdly, the comfort of participants was maximised since
they were with a chosen friend, as suggested by the literature—for example, Burns, Williams
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and Maxham (2000) found that in narrative texts generated about critical incidents, more is
disclosed to friends than to strangers. Most paired participants were noticeably more relaxed
and less guarded than they were in their solo interview, probably because they had a familiar
person with them and also because they had met the researcher and had more certainty as to
what to expect in the second session.
The process of interviewing a friendship pair is very different from traditional ‘single person’
interviewing and results in a form of shared narrative and construction of reality; that is,
meaning is socially constructed. In reports of studies in other disciplines, researchers suggest
that when interviewed together, pairs of people “negotiate in conversation, engage in a
dialogue about what can be told and how, finish each others’ sentences, interrupt, contradict,
add more information, tease and question each other” (Hamilton 2006, p.264). The joint
interview necessitates a process of negotiation and mediation in order to produce a single
collaborative account for the interviewer, which can provide material or insights that would
be difficult to identify in a one-on-one interview (Valentine 1999). Banister and Hogg (2004)
also note that joint interviews create a supportive feeling and assist in generating rapport
between the parties in the research setting. Furthermore, commercial researchers suggest that
studies with friendship pairs offer greater openness and honesty and less posturing because
friends know each other so well and can easily call each other’s bluff (Greenfield 2004).
There are a number of possible reasons for this technique not being widely used in academic
marketing research. Clearly, this approach is designed to investigate shared lived experiences
and provide rich holistic accounts of a phenomenon, and as such would not suit the needs of
researchers who seek to reflect some objective reality of an individual (Bayley and
Nancarrow 1998). At a more mundane level, paired interviews provide some practical
problems in terms of recruitment, coordinating sessions that suit all parties, gaining consent
and maintaining involvement of both parties throughout the research process. They are also
subject to the difficulties of interviewing dominant/subordinate pairs, creating equal
opportunities to participate and of developing rapport with both participants. The
researcher/interviewer must have skilful interview techniques to be able to manage and
follow the complexity of dialogue between two participants and be quick thinking enough to
follow-up with appropriate questions. The use of paired participants would not be suitable for
all research topics, particularly when disclosure of secret, illegal and/or deviant behaviours
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might adversely impact on one or other of the friends. Finally, the presence of two
participants may in some circumstances lead to collusion and deliberate obfuscation that
might be avoided if either focus groups of strangers or individual depth interviews were
employed.
In this study, friendship pair interviews were designed to be very relaxed and only loosely
structured. Participants were briefed in advance to expect a short joint review of the earlier
interviews and a discussion based around viewing several advertisements on the researcher’s
laptop computer. A funnel approach (Cavana, Delahaye, and Sekaran 2001) was employed,
starting with broader issues of advertising, imagery and national identity themes before
venturing into more specific enquiry regarding brands. The general format was intended to
uncover shared and unique experiences of New Zealand national identity; experiences of how
national identity was operationalised by brands; identification of brand resources that
contributed to national identity and a detailed understanding of how brands affected national
identity in the New Zealand context.
The interviews started by giving each participant the key themes summary from their friend’s
story (key themes summaries are discussed in the following pages). This served to focus
thoughts on their own story and elicited additions to their own key themes summary and, of
course, stimulated conversations and storytelling as they compared notes. It also set the scene
for the interview by stimulating thinking about national identity and initiating relatively
relaxed interaction between the two friends. The interview continued with the researcher
playing six television brand advertisements—the selection was tailored for each pair, as
discussed later. Participants were invited to discuss if and how national identity was
operationalised in the advertisements displayed, to consider how well the brands conformed
to their expectations of what New Zealand national identity was and whether advertisers
attempts at evoking New Zealand themes had been successful. Once these experiences had
been broadly canvassed, the discussions turned to more in-depth conversation about any
particular elements of the brand communications that affected their sense of national identity.
This extended to a discussion of their feelings and personal experiences when viewing brand
communications that incorporate such elements. Attention was paid to views on whether the
brand advertisements conform to prevailing expectations of national identity. Aberrant
decoding of the television commercials and discussions of whether the advertisements
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portray out of date or emergent aspects national identity were closely monitored.
Furthermore, the participants were asked about their experiences of sharing views about
brand communications and national identity with other people. The general topic of social
conversations about advertising was probed before moving on to whether, when and why
participants discussed brand stories from advertisements with others.
In the later part of the interview the researcher guided the conversation towards brands. The
friends were asked explicitly about which brands helped them feel the way they did about
New Zealand national identity. This was designed to elicit commentary about brand stories
that were affected by and, more particularly, that affect national identity, either augmenting,
modifying or in some way changing the emphasis on aspects of local identity. The pairs were
then asked about the brands already nominated, with particular reference to the purchase and
use of branded products/services based on sense of national identity engendered by brand
experiences.
The first interview, where autobiographical narratives were elicited, required quite different
skills to the second, where the pairs of friends discussed their ideas of New Zealand identity,
advertisements and eventually brands. Practice interviews of both types were conducted using
willing friends and colleagues. The sessions also assisted in fine-tuning the procedure using
the digital voice recorder, laptop computer, using the augmented sound system and playing
advertisements saved as media files. There is no definitive advice in the literature on how to
use such television advertisements in research sessions but in their article on the photo
elicitation interview technique Heisley and Levy (1991) suggest limiting photos per session
to a pretested number that is productive. Thus, the first session with participants became a
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sensitising interview that helped to confirm the workable number of brand advertisements
that could be used (six) and the scope of the fieldwork. It also guided subsequent interviews
and sensitised the interviewer to emerging themes.
Following the pretesting, the researcher devised a rotation strategy so that all 20
advertisements were used equally across the ten pair interviews. For each pair the researcher
attempted to select some brand advertisements that clearly matched key themes arising in the
individual interviews and some whose main themes had not been mentioned. Another
objective of the selection process was to ensure that at least one non New Zealand brand was
included and that there was a variety of branded products, services and advertising styles
amongst the six selected brand advertisements.
The researcher travelled to the interview locations nominated by participants. Interviews were
convened in quiet familiar social settings, rather than in university interview rooms, in order
to be as conducive as possible to informal discussion. The researcher interviewed all twenty
participants in their own homes which were spread across the newly created Auckland Super
City region—formerly Auckland City, Manukau City, North Shore City, Waitakere City, and
on the city fringe in semi-rural neighbourhoods and rural lifestyle blocks in Rodney and
Franklin. Each session began by completing the formalities regarding informed consent and
getting comfortable before starting the digital audio recording. The various participants
differed in the amount of forethought and preparation for the autobiographical interview,
some having made extensive written or mental notes on what they wanted to say, others
having apparently little preconceived idea what they might say. However, almost all of the
participants were quite talkative and once they got started, after a bit of prompting if
necessary, the storytelling interviews ran, on average, for 1 hour 14 minutes. All interviews
were transcribed using a professional transcription service. Appropriate Transcriber
Confidentiality Agreements were used to protect the participants’ rights—see Appendix 5.
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The researcher continued to add to the journal after all data collection was completed and the
journal ultimately provided an audit trail of the research process from data collection through
to the end of the analysis activities, functioning as an organisational aid but also becoming
part of the data. Most importantly, the research journal was a tool to enhance reflexivity,
where the researcher thought about her own thinking and thus, better understood how the
process of doing research shaped its outcomes (Holland 1999).
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posted to each participant with an explanatory covering letter and were followed up with a
phone call. Feedback was elicited and amendments made accordingly.
Participants expressed surprise and pleasure in seeing how some sense was made of their
‘ramblings’ and commented on how the storytelling process had stimulated more thought on
the topic after the interview. A number of participants decided that they did not wish to see
particular verbatim comments within key themes because on reflection, and considering
future scrutiny by their friend, the views were too strident or politically incorrect when
appearing in written form. After toning down the language in some cases, the summaries
were then updated to account for the latest refinements in their thinking. Each person
confirmed that she approved of her amended summary. Thus, the process of negotiating
national identity had begun, with the participants and me ‘accentuating the positive and
eliminating the negative’, as the song exhorts (Mister in Between, Johnny Mercer/Harold
Arlen, 1944).
Qualitative researchers are exhorted to use member checking, that is, to solicit feedback from
participants about the emerging coding system and interpretations of the interviews.
According to Lincoln and Guba (1985, p.314), “the member check, whereby data, analytic
categories, interpretations, and conclusions are tested with members of those stakeholding
groups from whom the data were originally collected, is the most crucial technique for
establishing credibility”. However, in marketing and consumer research studies this
procedure is rarely reported—one exception is Belk and Costa’s (1998) work on the
Mountain Man Myth—and, at best, researchers undertake simple member checks designed to
verify transcription accuracy and completeness. Member checking as described by Lincoln
and Guba (1985) is an integral part of good research etiquette, showing genuine respect for
the views and experiences of participants, and paying them the courtesy of revealing how
their information contributes to the overall research project.
on their latest personal input and the impact of telling their story in conjunction with their
friend. Privileging and constraining activities were particularly evident at this point as each
person could redefine their story as either similar or different to their friend. The benefits of
this procedure included extending the process of introspection as well as showing respect for
the contribution of the participants.
Despite conducting pretests using the recording equipment to assess the optimum settings for
recording two and three person interviews, the preparation did not eliminate the variation that
came when recording two friends sitting close together who had very different voices,
varying in pitch, loudness, speed and style of laughter. Despite her best efforts, the
interviewer was sometimes the most easily heard voice in the recording, with one of the
friendship pair being difficult to transcribe accurately. This effect was exacerbated when the
friends were talking at once, laughing before the other had finished speaking and speaking
sotto voce. One aspect of the two person interview that was not fully tested was the use of the
laptop computer combined with the digital audio recorder. The researcher had certainly
practised playing brand advertisements on the laptop, set up with an augmented sound
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system, with willing colleagues assisting as interviewees. However, it was only after several
interviews had been recorded that the transcribers and researcher discussed an unusually loud
and intermittent sound that had been captured. It was identified as the internal fan system of
the laptop which cut in and out as required and which was almost unnoticeable in the context
of a conversation. The digital voice recording did not allow for simultaneous sounds to be
comprehended and prioritised as easily as multiple live sounds are comprehended.
Transcripts contain all discernable conversation and where words could not be heard the
transcripts were annotated with [not intelligible].
The second issue relating to interviewing in homes is that the hostess participant was subtly
in control of the interview with respect to the duration and ending of the session. As a guest
in a home, the interviewer was obliged to follow the lead set by the hostess. Despite agreeing
to be available for at least 90 minutes, some participants clearly had very busy timetables and
the interview was squeezed in between other duties such as collecting children, going to
work, cooking meals, packing for a family vacation, and generally managing household
affairs. The researcher was sensitive to subtle (and overt) messages about concluding
interviews as soon as possible if the hostess indicated that this was her preference. This
reversal of the typical balance of power between researcher and participant(s) lead to some
interviews being hurried through the final stages, when ideally more probing and depth
questioning was desired by the researcher. In some cases fatigue, and being unaccustomed to
participating in sessions that call for in-depth thinking, were plausible explanations for why
participants were reluctant to extend their conversations any longer than necessary.
taking on other character’s voices and at other times simply quoting other people. Participants
sometimes sang advertising jingles, made sound effects and quoted memorable lines from
advertisements. Speech was addressed alternatively to the interviewer, the friend or both. At
times the participants talked aloud to themselves, commenting on their own performance,
asking questions and berating themselves for not being able to recall things etc. Finally, the
emphasis given to particular words and the degree of enthusiasm injected into exclamations
was notably absent in the transcripts prepared by the transcription service.
Academic discourse analysis and, more particularly, conversational analysis involves the use
of particular transcription conventions that allow analyses of phenomena relating to the
sequence, structure and coherence of conversations, and how speakers manage their
conversational interactions. These conventions (see, for example, Jefferson 2004) capture
features such as a shift into especially high pitch voice, sounds that are relatively much louder
than the prior talk, prolongation of sounds, measurement of time elapsed in pauses, stresses
on words, the absence of a break between stretches of talk, rising and falling intonation.
Analyses of these features are beyond the scope of this study, although clearly, there is
potential to enhance the transcripts for more detailed study in future research projects.
The process of making sense of how brands affect national identity began before the first
consumer interviews were conducted. The brand communications were analysed using a
visual rhetoric approach, as discussed in a following sub-section. In general, narrative
analysis underpinned the whole project and a discussion of this follows. The formal process
of data analysis was highly iterative, following the general approach advocated by Miles and
Huberman (1994). After all transcripts were completed, the qualitative data management
software programme NVivo8 was used to organise data and facilitate repeated coding,
abstraction and systematic comparisons. When the project started the analysis emphasis was
discovery oriented, exploratory and descriptive in flavour, with a focus on the key themes of
New Zealand national identity and the stories surrounding the 19 selected brand
advertisements. The analysis involved constant comparison, axial and selective coding
procedures as the results emerged.
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Narrative theory argues that people produce accounts of themselves that are ‘storied’ so that
analysis of narrative can be used to evaluate how people make and use their stories to
interpret the world. Narratives are interpretive devices through which people represent
themselves, and analysis of how their story is constructed offers insights into identity.
“Stories are concerned with human attempts to progress to a solution, clarification, or
unravelling of an incomplete situation. Narrative transforms a mere succession of events and
actions into a coherent whole in which these happenings gain meaning as contributors to a
common purpose” (Polkinghorne 1997, p.13).
Within the psychology literature, Bruner’s (1990) thesis is that stories serve the function of
helping individuals make sense and meaning out of their lives, so that narrative analysis is an
important tool in understanding different facets of the self, social relationships and place in
the world. It is this approach to narrative analysis that was most relevant to this study of
experiences of brand and national identity. A narrative approach was useful in understanding
the ways people construct meaning about their experiences and identity because of the active
nature of narrative in identity construction (Denzin 2001).
their marketing communications were ritualised (Kates 2006), as Ritson and Elliott (1999)
reported in their study of adolescents. Thorough examination of the transcripts allowed
discovery of “the stable storytelling, rituals and traditions that relate to the commercial text”
(Kates 2006, p.101).
In this study, which has television brand advertising as its main focus, the visual elements of
brand communications were of particular interest. Television is the overarching global
marketing communications medium and the visual aspect is an important and complex part of
the text which strongly contributes to the meaning of brand advertising. Hence, a visual
rhetoric approach which offers an important means of analysing how brands affect national
identity was used.
Advertising can be conceptualised as a form of rhetoric (McQuarrie and Mick 1996) where
the advertiser tries to use the most effective devices for informing, reminding and persuading
the target market. More importantly, the persuasive use of symbols, including pictures, may
be conceptualised as visual rhetoric (McQuarrie and Mick 1999; McQuarrie and Phillips
2008; Scott 1994), where the advertising consumer has to think into it (Phillips 1997). Hence,
a television or print brand advertisement is a pictorial field with marks and symbols arranged
for the primary purpose of persuasion (Scott 1994) with the specific arrangement of the
elements and the stylistic delivery of them contributing to the rhetorical impact. As discussed
earlier, brand communications are embedded with visual representations and narratives which
form part of the visual landscape (Schroeder 2002; Schroeder and Salzer-Mörling 2006).
The concept of visual rhetoric has gained wide acceptance as scholars strive to understand the
power of visual persuasion in ‘texts’ such as paintings, films and commercial websites.
Visual rhetoric may be described as a form of communication that uses images for creating
meaning or constructing an argument. Hence, an analysis of visual rhetoric considers how
images work alone and collaborate with other elements to create an argument designed for
moving a specific audience. A study of the design and function of a brand advertising text
and how its visual elements work (choice of props, actors, colour, placement and order of
presentation) contributes to understanding the persuasive arguments.
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A visual rhetoric approach also acknowledges that, where pictures and language are
combined, visual communication affects linguistic communication and may have rhetorical
consequences. Studying visual themes and noting how they are used within particular
advertisements and mapping their relationships with similar or opposing themes, is a means
of gaining insights into the meaning of the brand advertising text as a whole. Furthermore, as
discussed earlier, the Brand Culture approach developed by Schroeder and Salzer-Mörling
(2006) paves the way for understanding that visual representations and narratives of national
identity may be embedded in brands through their communications, and at every point of
contact and experience the consumer has with the brand.
3.4 Methodology
The methodology in this study was essentially qualitative since the aim was to gain thick
descriptions that facilitate understanding of human experiences (Geertz 1993). The objective
was to create an emic account of how brands affect national identity, that is, one which is
culture-specific and couched in terms meaningful to the participants. Qualitative research
implies richness and contextualisation but within the qualitative tradition the way that a study
should be conducted is not prescribed. Studies are “guided by particular philosophical
stances that are taken by the researcher in relation to each phenomenon” (Neill 2003, p.1).
However, there are a number of common features of qualitative research.
Within the wider marketing literature, which includes consumer research and advertising,
discourse has been analysed in a number of ways and the term discourse analysis has been
used to denote various approaches to analysing different types of texts. In his foundation
article on the potential application of discourse analysis in marketing, Elliott (1996, p.66)
noted the recent development of the “social psychological methodology” (as detailed by
Fairclough 1990; Potter and Wetherell 1987) and outlined a number of ways of conducting
analysis ranging from “fine-grained study of linguistic features in texts” to a focus on
“dominant themes” in discourse. The intention in this study was to focus more on dominant
themes and macro discourse rather than micro, context-specific discourse as indicated on the
continuum proposed by Alvesson and Kärreman (2000). This same approach to discourse
analysis, with a focus on dominant themes, has also been used in published marketing
research, examples of which are summarised in Table 4.
The types of texts used in the studies range from interview transcripts, news media stories
and postings from an on-line environment. The contents of the table are illustrative of how
discourse analysis has been used in the context of research in the marketing discipline. One of
these published studies has a number of features in common with this thesis research. The
research into overt sexuality in advertising (Elliott et al. 1995) utilises discourse analysis to
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understand responses to visual texts and this thesis research has some similarities to it. While
both studies are concerned with aspects of visual texts, it is the discourse that surrounds them
that is of primary importance.
Discourse analysis is particularly useful in understanding lived experiences and reality since
it assumes that texts—meaning the whole gamut of texts, including written, conversational
and, of course, visual texts—construct reality and that “language is used to make sense of
and construct the social world” (Catterall and Maclaran 2002, p.234). Furthermore, discourse
analysis provides a means of examining how consumers construct and perform their
identities, and their versions of their world by their use of language (Catterall and Maclaran
2002). In this study, discourse analysis was used to understand how national identity is
constructed and to illuminate the social processes affecting national identity through brand
experiences.
3.5 Introspection
Introspection, in one form or another, was embedded in all aspects of the data collection and
theory building in this thesis research. Introspection was not a linear, bounded activity, but
rather a vast network of intertwined layers, connecting the introspections of various people, at
various times, regarding national identity in the autobiographical sense, constructions of
national identity in the context of friendship pairs, and at the broadest imagined community
level of the nation. The many and varied introspective narratives (texts) were subject to an
introspective interpretive process, so that understanding of the overall text was established by
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referring components to the whole and the parts to each other—a hermeneutic circle where
the text’s meaning was found within its context.
The national identity introspection texts unfolded over time and incorporated the narratives of
various people, acting in different capacities at different times, invoking a range of self and
social identities. In order to better understand the various strands of introspection in this
thesis, it is useful to consider Wallendorf and Brucks’ (1993) five part categorisation of
introspection. They categorised introspection based loosely on the role of introspector and
relationship with researcher; researcher introspection, where the researcher is the informant
for the study; guided introspection, where the researcher conducts other people in their
introspection about themselves; interactive introspection, where common circumstances
between the researcher and participant(s) are the focal point of joint introspection; syncretic
forms, where data independently collected from both participant(s) introspection and
researcher introspection are combined; and, reflexivity within research, where, for example,
journals of self-observation in field work are kept and used to enrich the process of
developing understanding of the research topic (Wallendorf and Brucks 1993). Their
categorisation is used as a loose framework to tie together various elements of narrative
production already detailed in the methods section and to guide the discussion regarding the
types of introspection contributing to this study.
A significant part of the study involved the researcher conducting other people in their
introspection about themselves in a form of guided introspection. Both the life history
narrative interviews and the friendship pair interviews encouraged thinking about how
national identity was operationalised by brands and gave participants practice at introspecting
about their own national identity in connection with brands. Most significantly, these
activities generated introspection and co-created narratives that captured a joint, more
communal expression of national identity.
Interactive introspection was also a feature of the study. The common cultural identity and
demographic profile of the participants and researcher became the focal point of joint
introspection at certain times during the interviews. Immediately prior to starting life history
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interview sessions, the researcher observed social niceties, introducing herself and offering a
small gift of food to eat with coffee. Since recruitment had been through a snowball
procedure, it was entirely natural to discuss the chain of mutual acquaintances. The
researcher, who was unknown to all participants, deliberately offered an outline of her own
life, establishing some simple facts such as age of her children and herself, her family’s move
from a provincial town to the city during her school years, and brief mention of her early
working life and employment prior to becoming an academic. However, she avoided mention
of specifics which might more fully signal her achievements, social class and status.
Standard advice about conducting interviews warns the researcher not to be tempted to jump
in with her own stories, in order to keep the focus on the interviewee (Esterberg 2002).
However, by interacting with a participant and responding to her story by affirming common
experiences, a shared narrative was produced. For example, a brief acknowledgement of
having had childhood holidays in the same remote beach township lead to a rich trip down
memory lane. A few of the researcher’s memories were offered in response to the
participants’ experiences which further stimulated the introspective process. In return,
particular care was taken by participants in fully articulating the essence of those common
life experiences.
Periodically, participants addressed the researcher, pointing out likely common experiences
and, at times, interrogating her about people, places and events. This stimulated more
interactive introspection as the story unfolded. On one occasion a participant talked about a
recent experience with her friend and their teenagers at a drug and alcohol free music festival
and asked if the researcher and her children had been. This lead to further participant stories
about hitherto forgotten festival experiences which highlighted key national identity themes
of outdoor lifestyles, important links with places and landscapes, and characteristics of
‘roughing it,’ making do and not complaining. The use of interactive introspection increased
the richness of the collected narratives and lead to a more thorough interpretation of the lived
experience of New Zealand national identity. Without the interactive introspection involving
the participant and researcher together it is unlikely that such stories would have been
accessed.
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Many reflexive research disciplines were used in this study. The research journal used to
stimulate critical thinking and review assumptions made by participants has already been
described (Nadin and Cassell 2006). Metacognitive introspection, thought watching and self-
monitoring were crucial to managing this research project and many such introspective
thoughts were recorded in the journal which formed part of the data set; critical analysis and
active control over the processes of thinking are central to all research. When conducting an
interview the researcher was constantly monitoring herself and managing the directions her
thoughts were going in, since she was aware her prompts, clarifying questions and body
language could facilitate the telling of some stories. Alternatively, her actions could have had
the effect of subtly side-lining some stories, possibly because they reflected life outside her
own experience.
The researcher recorded concerns about both privileging some aspects of participants’ stories
because she could truly relate to them, but also using her power to change tack if narratives
seemed boring or off track, perhaps because they did not conform to the academically derived
views developed prior to the fieldwork. On reflection this concern also highlighted the
difference between academic reflexivity and personal reflexivity, where codified knowledge
and intellectual expectations are different from the multi-faceted organic experiences of the
embodied researcher.
significant unspoken issues, since they may indicate a challenge to ideas about the familiar
sense of self and place. Deliberate introspection by the researcher, prompted by re-reading
these sorts of observations, added value to the overall process of building theory to account
for consumer experiences of brands and national identity.
Metacognitive introspection was also purposely employed to account for the impact on the
researcher of unfamiliar interview locations and challenging interview content. The
participants’ home environment, style of furnishings, displays of possessions, evidence of
hobbies, household members and other visible signs of life added to the impression of
interviewees and interpretation of interviews. It was important for the researcher to question
herself about assumptions regarding the life stories, made as a result of exposure to living
environments—in each case, what would have been different if the interview had been
conducted in a research facility at the university? The researcher’s response to the physical
site and life context of the interviewees created an extra dimension to the study and
reflections on the effect of venue added another layer of text to the project. In reviewing the
interview transcripts, the researcher revisited her feelings during the interviews, such as when
participants chose to disclose mistreatment in childhood. Similarly, there were occasions
where views were expressed that the researcher found distasteful, for example a racially
intolerant outlook, or comments relating to party politics that she did not support. Standing
back and examining her own responses at a later time and in a different context assisted in
making sense of the participant’s original story.
There were many other triggers for reflection. The researcher’s insights developed after each
successive autobiographical interview, on listening to and reading the transcripts, and in
preparation of the key themes summaries. Furthermore, the researcher’s supervisor was an
integral part of the reflective process, reviewing each key themes summary and keeping up to
date with the researcher’s reflections via a weekly debriefing session. For example, reflecting
on whether the autobiographical narratives were what had been anticipated revealed more
clearly what the original assumptions were regarding richness and detail in the stories, and
the proportion of focus on micro/personal issues versus macro/generalised issues. By
questioning the researcher regarding the interview process, on what was working and what
was not, the supervisor triggered more introspection and therefore more refinements in
conceptualising the experience of national identity in brands. Each debriefing discussion was
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informed by the supervisor’s thinking, experiences of brands and New Zealand identity and
all the introspection and other interview activities that had preceded it. These weekly joint
reflections were part of many introspective activities that contributed to the construction of
theory around brands and national identity.
It is understood from previous studies that the term ‘researcher introspection’ includes data
generated by activities ranging from the metacognitive to the narrative (Gould 2006). It
accounts for the researcher’s subjective self and objective self, being alternatively the
observer and the observed. However, there are boundaries between what is considered
acceptable and unacceptable—the public and the private. In most studies the private stories of
the researcher are not revealed and yet they make a significant contribution to the study. This
is well illustrated in this research.
In order to make sense of the stories being told, the researcher needed to tell her own story to
herself—her story of being a New Zealander, highlighting her own ideas of national identity.
In anticipation of the first interview, the researcher mentally prepared her own story,
recasting it in different ways—chronological, with reference to ancestors, and by themes such
as national characteristics, values, favourite places and experiences. After hearing others’
stories, this internal narrative was refined, reshaped and refocused, using previously forgotten
or unrecognised elements prompted by the interactions with others. The researcher merged
and blended the various narratives with her own and repeatedly rehearsed the story, at times
finding that it was bubbling up spontaneously and telling itself while she was driving or
trying to sleep. In essence, the researcher’s unconscious self is somehow embedded in the
data set. Despite not being written down, her narrative informs the whole study and thus, it is
argued, the researcher is a key informant of the study. This point is significant and highly
underexplored in reports of research in the marketing discipline.
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In this study I have used introspective field experiences as a source of re-thinking and theory
generation. This form of theory generation is known as abduction. Charles Sanders Peirce
coined the term abduction to describe a thinking process that begins with observation and
seeks a theory to explain the facts. This is in contrast to the logic of deduction, where b is a
formal consequence of a (all brands have logos, therefore if this is a brand, it must have a
logo), or induction, where b is inferred from a but the conclusion is not guaranteed (all New
Zealand children in a sample love Marmite, therefore all New Zealand children in the
population love Marmite). Scholars in business research (see, for example, Dubois and Gadde
2002; Van Maanen, Sørensen, and Mitchell 2007) have noted the potential of an abductive
approach in theory development, taking a surprising fact and generating the most plausible
explanation, or new theory, that might account for the previous theoretically unexpected
finding.
An interpretive theoretical perspective frames this research. The ‘interpretive turn’ label is
used in social sciences to group approaches that analyse the ways people make sense of their
everyday activities and surroundings. Three prominent streams within the interpretivist
approach to human enquiry are symbolic interactionism, phenomenology and hermeneutics
(Crotty 1998). This study employed the hermeneutic mode of understanding which is
addressed in more detail below.
An interpretive approach is one where the researcher, through her interactions with
participants, is an inherent part of the sense making process as a participant, rather than as a
detached objective observer. Within an interpretive approach, the world is always an
experienced world, so that knowledge is constituted through lived experiences of reality.
Thus, interpretive research takes into account the everyday life context and perspectives of
participants regarding social phenomena, as well as the role and influence of the researcher
on the research process. The researcher is involved in a process of interpretation and
reconstruction of reality based on her experiences of texts at the time of data collection and
later in the continuing process of engaging with the various texts under consideration. When
conducting research the interpretation that emerges is the product of cognitive processing as
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well as sensing and feeling that is sometimes impossible to articulate (Guba 1996) so that,
ultimately, the researcher is an agent through which knowledge is perceived or experienced
(Lee 1992).
Interpretive research is founded on the belief that human responses must be explained with
reference to the cultural context (Scott 1994). Using interpretive methods the researcher looks
for key patterns or relationships in order to discover consumer-based constructs and theories
(Hirschman and Thompson 1997). The specific situation determines the form and direction
the interpretation will take—“an interpretation is always context bound” (Bohman, Hiley,
and Shusterman 1991, p.12). Interpretive perspectives have been widely used in consumer
culture studies that investigate the dynamic relationships between consumer actions, the
marketplace, and cultural meanings (see, for example, Arnould and Thompson 2005;
Hirschman 1989).
The interpretive approach provided a useful context for research into how brands affect
national identity because it assumed that cultural context was central to any interpretation of
lived experience. It also allowed for rich texts to be collected by the researcher through
exposure to participants, and for in-depth insights into their lived experiences to be generated
through researcher co-production of those texts. This interpretive study aimed to build theory
that “accounts for the real world and that is both bounded and perceptually laden” (Miles
and Huberman 1994, p.4).
3.6.1 Hermeneutics
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Importantly, texts have meaning beyond mere semantics and provide a link between
individuals and or communities. “It has now become commonplace to say that we all
‘interpret’. However, hermeneutics—the critical theory of interpretation—is the only current
in western thought that has made this issue its own, notwithstanding its presence in both
Marxism and that so-called science of phenomena, phenomenology. Through hermeneutics,
interpretation has become part of our cultural self-understanding that only as historically
and culturally located beings can we articulate ourselves in relation to others in the world in
general” (Rundell 1995, p.10 cited in Crotty 1998). The purpose, intention and context of the
text’s author and the subsequent relationship between the author and the interpreter all have a
bearing on the understanding of the text. Furthermore, through hermeneutic enquiry implicit
assumptions and intentions that the author may scarcely have been aware of may be
uncovered. Meaning is not revealed in a single flash of insight. Rather, the literature refers to
the concept of the hermeneutic circle whereby an iterative process is used to gain
understanding. Parts of the text are analysed and meaning of the whole increases as the parts
are compared, updated, developed and understood. The process is repeated as new
understandings are brought to bear on the preconceived or originally interpreted components.
Klein and Myers (1999), in addressing questions from researchers, editors and reviewers
about how to conduct and evaluate interpretive field research, proposed seven principles of
hermeneutics based on the practice of anthropological research and other research of a
hermeneutic nature. Klein and Myers’ summary is reproduced in an abridged form in Figure
5. A systematised and standardised approach to introspective research, conceptualised as an
interpretive endeavour, can be derived from understanding hermeneutic principles. This is
demonstrated by taking each of the seven principles and relating them to introspection and
introspective thought used in this research.
Firstly, the fundamental principle of the hermeneutic circle underpins all introspection, and
was clearly illustrated in this project as the shared constructions of national identity emerged
as a complex whole from the many interactions between participants, the researcher and other
contributors. During interviews, where friendship pairs and individuals were guided in their
introspection, participants appropriated ideas from the researcher and vice versa (Klein and
Myers 1999). Even as a solitary exercise, introspection by a single researcher in narrative
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mode is socially constructed, as thoughts are drawn from within a cultural and historical
context.
Figure 5. Summary of Principles for Interpretive Research (source, Klein and Myers 1999,
p.72)
The principle of contextualisation suggests that in order for the intended audience to make
sense of the final interpretation, introspective narratives should be framed as being set in a
particular context. In this study narratives were offered by consumer participant pairs and
individuals with birth country, gender, age and stage of life in common, and the researcher
contextualised divergent narratives with reference to, for example, having lived abroad for a
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long time, having a rural upbringing or having childhood experiences that were (in their time)
considered atypical. Explicating the context of introspection was necessary given that
“people are active makers of their physical and social reality” (Orlikowski and Baroudi
1991, cited in Klein and Myers 1999, p.73).
The principle of interaction between the researcher and the subjects identifies that social
interactions and processes used to collect introspective narratives (from the self or from
others) necessarily affect the stories that are told. The embodied researcher reacts and
responds to the text in a holistic sense and uses reflexive skills to generate a critical view. The
principle of abstraction and generalisation also applies to introspective research, where
particular individualised narratives are read as texts contributing to a more generalised and
universal text. As the iterative process continues apparently contradictory stories are
reconciled and a contextualised, more universal interpretation is made. Through processes of
analysis and abstraction the researcher links the specific and personal to theoretical concepts,
such as performativity, embodiment and belonging.
This interpretive approach employing the hermeneutic mode of understanding had appeal to
me—an important factor according to Goulding (1999), who notes the value of choosing a
research approach that fits the researcher, her style of working, who she is and how she
thinks—and was well suited to understanding texts generated for the purposes of studying
consumers’ lived experiences of brands and national identity.
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Another important source of narratives was the advertising agency industry, the gatekeepers
and facilitators who gave access to suitable television brand advertisements for use in the
study. When requesting assistance from these organisations the researcher briefed them on
the purpose of the study and some individuals expressed considerable interest in the topic.
These people and the others that the researcher negotiated with in advertising agencies played
a powerful role in allowing or forbidding the use of certain material for use in the study, once
again privileging some stories and suppressing others. The researcher also met with a senior
executive at three agencies and they each discussed the project, gave a personal historical
overview of brands important to New Zealand identity, their experiences of advertising, with
respect to identity, and personal anecdotes of what characterised New Zealand identity.
The expert panel provided yet another source of narratives. Undoubtedly, the experts blended
their objective professional judgments with their own personal experiences of consuming
brand advertising and sense (or absence) of New Zealand national identity. On reflection the
researcher noted that, conventionally, expert narrative tends to be privileged over other
contributions, such that intellectual input appears more valuable than lived experiences.
Overall, the final narrative comes from repeated study of the many different texts, not just
those narratives formally collected during interviews. Meaning was inter-subjectively created
and the process of understanding experiences of brands and national identity was iterative—
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the interpretation of the whole was progressively understood from studying the parts.
Reflections evolved as the texts looked different each time around, gradually revealing a
meta-narrative and making the researcher more aware of the personal and disciplinary
constraints on creating the most honest story for constructing theory.
3.7 Epistemology
The underlying epistemology in this study is social constructionism (as distinct from
constructivism). It is important to clarify how these terms are being used here, since the
terminology in the literature is “far from consistent” (Crotty 1998, p.57). Constructivism is
the epistemological consideration when the matter under discussion is the unique experiences
of people and the focus is on the meaning making of the individual mind (Crotty 1998, p.58).
Central to that epistemology is the independence of each individual’s constructions.
Contrastingly, in the social constructionist view espoused by Crotty, all meaningful reality is
socially constructed by people as they engage with others in the world they are interpreting
and see the world through the lens of their own culture (Crotty 2003). That is to say, meaning
is conceptualised as jointly created within the social constructionist perspective, as opposed
to being formed through purely private cognitive processes (Hackley 1998). Social reality is
constructed, supported and reproduced through social life and is a function of shared
meanings (Crotty 2003).
The term social constructionist utilises the word social to emphasise the social mode of
meaning generation however, it is not necessary for the objects of interest to be social objects
such as kinship, law, finance or nationalism (Crotty 1998). For social constructionists,
meaning and truth relating to social phenomena, and natural and physical realities do not
exist independent of the human context. Social constructionism is used when the focus is on
the collective generation and transmission of meaning (Crotty 1998).
The social constructionist approach assumes that social life is constituted though language
and discourse (Hackley 1998) and thus, mutual construction of meaning and the collective
processes involved in generating discourse are highlighted by the social constructionist
approach. In illustrating this point, Hackley (1998) suggests that advertising creativity is not
an entity that subsists in the universe, but is only socially constructed from the ways that
people talk about it. Meaning is constructed through the social processes and intentional
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discursive strategies of suppressing and actively selecting what to say and how to express
experiences. Crotty (2003, p.47) suggests, “What constructionism drives home
unambiguously is that there is no true or valid interpretation. There are useful
interpretations to be sure, and these stand over against interpretations that appear to serve
no useful purpose.”
A social constructionism approach entirely underpins the way that the major constructs of
interest in this study are conceptualised and have been discussed in the literature review.
Brands, marketing communications and national identity are constituted through social
activities and do not exist as ‘facts.’ Brands are conceived of as symbolic and experiential
entities that exist only with the conceptual and social recognition of those consumers that
recognise them as brands.
Marketing communications are social constructions that operate within a social context.
Advertisements and other types of communications do not portray objective reality in their
images, dialogue and copy. Neither do they send pre-specified universal messages—it is the
advertising consumer who, in conjunction with the creators of the advertisement, determines
the message at an individual level. Each advertisement is polysemic and thus, does not have
one unique and bounded meaning—multiple meanings arise from culturally bound variations
in interpretations of language and imagery. As previously discussed, meaning in advertising
is co-created, mediated by the influences of the social and individual realm. Meaning of
advertising is not independent of the consumer’s unique life experiences and plans, or the
social uses a consumer has for the interpreted meaning (Ritson and Elliott 1995).
Sense of self is socially constructed through discourse—“who one is depends on the moment-
to-moment movements in conversation” (Gergen 1999, p.80). Social identities, such as
identification as an environmental activist, cricket expert or benefactor of the arts, rest on
there being social agreement about what these identities mean—social identities cannot be
conceived without a socially constructed understanding of what these identities entail.
National identity, as has already been discussed, is an inherently social imaginary, and does
not have any basis in the natural world as a characteristic that can be observed or measured
independent of the joint activities of people who categorise themselves and others into such
in and out groups.
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In summary, the objective of the research is founded on the epistemological premise that
experiences of brands and national identity are both socially constructed. Accordingly, the
epistemology of social constructionism provides a meaningful basis for exploring experiences
of brands and national identity.
Trustworthiness of the researcher is the first issue to consider—in particular, accuracy and
faithfulness in observing, reporting and interpreting encounters with participants (Cavana et
al. 2001). The researcher is responsible for maximising the “extent to which the interviews
investigate the meaning of the life-world themes of the interviewed” (Kvale 1984, p.191).
Pretesting was conducted in several preliminary, sensitising interviews so that the researcher
increased proficiency in questioning, probing and clarifying techniques, and developed
standardised procedures for selecting and viewing brand advertisements. Ethical observances
were met in all dealings with participants, including recruitment procedures, ensuring
informed consent was obtained, maintaining rights of withdrawal, explicit consent for audio
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Regarding the analysis, formal and informal reflexive practices were used extensively to
allow for evaluation by the researcher, of the researcher and of the analysis in order to ensure
that the true experiences of the participants were reported. The quality of interpretive research
is dependent on the creation of an overall narrative which best vivifies the experiences
affecting consumers and/or businesses. What is important is that the researcher alleviates
constraints that affect narrative production and interpretation, so that more useful outcomes
may be obtained in communicating the most vivid realities and constructing theory.
Researcher self-awareness and consideration of the layers of experiences that contribute to
the final outcome are all part of the iterative hermeneutics of introspection. Reflexive
practices continued throughout the phases of the study including consideration of writing
issues such as whether and why “you are quoting more from one respondent than another”
and contemplation of whether “you agree with one person’s sentiment or turn of phrase more
than those of another” (Ahern 1999, p.409). The study benefited from a planned approach to
doing researcher introspection and from other systematic and ad hoc applications of
introspection in the course of the data collection process, analysis and writing.
Verification practices were used as another means of ensuring accuracy and replicability.
Various forms of triangulation were employed in this study. The use of two sessions with
each participant, employing different interview approaches increased rigour and improved the
quality of the data. Using verbatim transcripts and conducting extensive member checking
also helped to provide a more rigorous data set. Eisenhardt (1989) supports this approach and
suggests that triangulation, made possible by multiple data collection methods (two types of
interviews, two researchers, secondary data, follow-up member checks and the researcher’s
journal), provides stronger substantiation of constructs and hypotheses. As already discussed,
triangulation with another researcher was an important feature of the development of
emergent themes during the autobiographical interview phase of data collection.
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Other rigorous approaches were embedded in the research design; for example, the
appropriate recruitment of research participants and selection of advertisements for use in this
study, as has already been discussed. The use of real brand communication campaigns
ensured high production values, contributing to greater levels of, what has traditionally been
called, external validity.
As suggested by many qualitative researchers, this thesis includes, 1) a full explanation of the
basis for the study and, 2) an acknowledgement of subjectivity and bias through a declaration
of relevant interests, gender, race, socio-economic status. The study methods and procedures
used in this research are explicitly documented to ensure that the reader has adequate
background information (Miles and Huberman 1994). Overall, the aim is to show that
“results are supportable and not casually derived” but not that they are objective or that they
are exhaustive, since others might see other things that the lone researcher has omitted
(Hopkinson and Hogg 2006, p.162). Finally, interview transcripts are available from the
author on request and brand communications used in this study are included in a CD-ROM
for other researchers to scrutinise.
This chapter has detailed the qualitative research methods used to investigate specific
research questions regarding the role that brand experiences play in national identity and the
use of brands as experiential entities for use in national identity projects. The research design,
participant selection and recruitment criteria, interview protocol, brand advertisement
selection, logistics of data collection, analysis methods, integrity and quality measures have
all been detailed and justified. The research methods were intended to generate thick
descriptions that facilitated understanding of consumer experiences of brands and national
identity and create an emic account of how brands affect national identity. The theoretical
perspective of interpretivism deploying a hermeneutical approach and the epistemological
stance of social constructionism that underpins the whole study have been discussed. Finally,
the extensive use of introspection and introspective thought in narrative construction, central
to building theory has been critically discussed. A summary of the research tools and
methods used in this study is provided in Table 5.
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4 Chapter Four
FINDINGS
4.1 Overview
The purpose of chapter four is to present the findings that address the research questions
‘How do consumers experience national identity in brand communications?’ and ‘What are
the social processes affecting national identity through brand experiences?’ Firstly, the reader
is provided with descriptive analyses of the unique and particular contextual setting of the
research participants. Secondly, key themes of national identity that emerged from
autobiographical interviews are detailed. Thirdly, the reader is introduced to the brand
advertisements used in the study. Each brand advertisement is profiled, a summary of the
expert panel analysis of key themes is tabled and text units that illustrate the main national
identity themes recognised by the pairs of participants are cited. Then the other findings from
the pair interviews are reported. Thus, this chapter forms the foundation for chapter five, a
discussion of the findings in the context of the extant literature.
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I was a student resident in Palmerston North for four years and have not lived overseas or
embarked on a typical OE (overseas experience). My New Zealand born parents have English
and Scottish ancestry. My English born husband and I have two teenage sons. My
occupations prior to becoming an academic were firstly, food technologist, later brand
manager in the food industry and lastly, full-time stay at home mother for four years.
Raw summaries of individual’s key themes of national identity were produced after each
autobiographical narrative interview by aggregating short verbatim text units. Tabular
comparisons of these raw summaries of how New Zealand identity was experienced by the
two women in each friendship pair are presented in the Raw Key Theme Summaries for
Friendship Pairs in Appendix 7. Aspects of New Zealand national identity revealed in the
autobiographical interviews or in the process of member-checking form the basis of these
summaries. Text in italics denotes those comments that arose later during the paired
interviews, either as a result of examining each other’s key themes or while discussing how
national identity was experienced in the particular brand advertisements.
The process of refining key themes of national identity from the 20 autobiographical
narrative interviews involved repeated readings, constant comparison and the development of
thematic codes within the framework of the researcher’s previously established categorisation
of New Zealand national identity. Iterations of this process continued until modifications to
the coding system were complete and every interview was coded. A summary of key themes
from the 20 research participants follows in Table 7, with themes ranked according to the
number of individual participants who mentioned them unsolicited in their autobiographical
interview and/or who especially identified them as key themes worthy of inclusion during the
pair interview. Explanations of these national identity themes (organised by category) with
text unit illustrations providing more detail are available in Appendix 8.
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11
Tiki touring is a New Zealand term which refers to an extensive or comprehensive journey of inspection
(Source: NZ Oxford Dictionary)
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This section of the findings is arranged by brand, so that reader is provided with an overview
that combines data from several different sources. Firstly, the brand name, product or service
type, and the title of each advertisement are documented for all 19 brands. Then a simple
scene description for each brand advertisement is provided along with a brief brand history
and details of any linkages with other nations. (Scripts and production details are presented in
Appendix 6 and digital files of the commercials are provided on a CD-ROM which
accompanies this thesis.) As discussed, an expert panel analysed the selected brand
advertisements with reference to the researcher’s five part categorisation of New Zealand
national identity. This analysis of themes with reference to the categories is tabled. Finally, a
few text units that illustrate typical pair interview responses to the brand marcoms are
documented. The key themes of national identity, identified from autobiographical narratives,
provided a benchmark for the participants to evaluate the brand marcoms. The participant
quotes are intended to convey to the reader that national identity themes were recognised in
each brand commercial, in many cases echoing the more extensive range of themes identified
by the expert panel tabled on the same page.
In addressing the research question, ‘How do consumers experience national identity in brand
communications?’ participants were shown six TVCs and asked firstly, “Are any of your key
themes in that ad?” Clearly, from the participants’ perspective key themes of national identity
were present in the brand communications. All pairs of participants recognised at least some
of their own (and/or their friend’s) key themes in each advertisement shown by the
researcher. The average number of key themes evident to participants in each of the 19
television commercials ranged from 4.3 per pair (for NZI Stealing your stuff) to 11.3 per pair
(for Mainland Four seasons), with an average score of 7.4 key themes per pair over the entire
selection of advertisements. However, average scores such as these do not tell the whole story
and the quotes provide a contextualised view of how the themes were recognised and
discussed by participants.
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Participants: It’s got special places here and I think that girl was, had a special place she
wanted to go to, so. I think it’s a really beautiful ad. And we’ve said here about family land
and that, so. (Donna)
Well I think you’ve got your culture in there ... Both with the character and the song that’s
playing in the background. (Elaine)
Yeah, for me that’s the Maori spirituality, that Maoriness that you find that makes us unique,
in a way that establishes us from every other country that, around us. We are who we are
because of that. And the variety of the landscape too. (Fiona)
And the freedom too, there’s the flight, there’s the, I don’t know, there just sort of a sense of,
just freedom, it’s there, it’s a land that’s there for the taking kind of, I don’t know, there’s
sort of a journey, going on a journey discovering it. (Elaine) 12
12
In order to economise on space, the symbol // will be used (only in this themes summary section) to signify
when various comments by one participant have been combined in one place.
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Participants: Yeah. I think it should be [referring to alcohol and beer theme]. Mixing with
people from all walks of life, although they tended, they were more the same. // I love that,
you know, like I think Kiwi’s have got a really good sense of humour. (Ann)
They had, the whole things of younger people, it didn’t have any older people. I’ve got here
typical Kiwi men. They are different. Like beer, motorbikes, vehicles, loyalty to each other,
and I see that in that ad... And sports mad. So they’re doing, they’ve got the cricket, they’ve
covered the whole thing there, and no snobbery, I would say that’s there. (Belinda)
But that’s very, you know, friendly, everyone’s getting on and, you know, come over to my
place over the back fence... That time for me was, encompasses the beach holiday attitude,
you know, you kind of, you are like that when you’re on holiday at the beach.
(Lana)
Definitely has the laid back thing there, there’s certainly no touch of class in that one,
everyone just pops over to the next one, to the next one, to the next one. (Karen)
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Participants: Manuka13. That’s the only thing I think was Kiwi, apart from the scenery and
the fact they mentioned manuka (Marcia)
The camping thing even, you know, that could have been out in the friggin’ Rockies. (Nicola)
... Understated and humble. I mean I love both those words in that, because it’s not gushy, we
don’t, we’re not kind of, again, and I guess I’m [thinking that] Americans that sort of say,
“Oh,” like, about their own country and their history and it almost sort of feels forced and a
bit false. Whereas, yeah, it is what it is and that’s it. Do you know what I mean? // Well
there’s the map, the barbeque, the outdoors, that sort of clean green 100% New Zealand
made that I think comes through. (Elaine)
And also that really being interested in what people think of us. I haven’t put this here, but,
yes I have, something about wanting, how we, Kiwis are always interested to know what
people think, well my observation is. // Yeah, strong sense of national pride. (Fiona)
13
Sawdust from the native manuka tree is commonly used to smoke foods
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Participants: Yeah, I think just going on holidays overseas, going on holidays during the
school holidays and things like that ‘cause you’d have to jump on the Interisland ferry to
cross the island. You know, taking your kids with you and making it a family orientated thing.
You know, the water, land and sea is very close and that, so I think it’s relevant. (Cathy)
I think New Zealand is in the song really. The song really affects it. (Donna)
You got, the music got you straight away ‘cause you knew it was kiwiana, so you like the ad, I
think you like the ad straightaway ‘cause of that probably. And then you just watch and I
mean and it did flick a bit to the background and that but, you know, just think, “Oh we
actually do live in a beautiful country,” and yeah. (Cathy)
Travelling, holidaying. (Marcia)
Family, yeah family. (Nicola)
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Participants: Ah, that sort of summer holidays, chilling by the pool. // Mm. It’s definitely,
again, that whole, sense of humour, saying the first name that pops in to your mind. That
natural slang, like you know the whole, “’Cause it was choice.” You know just that typical
Kiwi slang, “Mate, choice, she’ll be right.” You know all that sort of stuff. // Again, laid
back, easy lifestyle, don’t mind our P’s and Q’s, not too, you know, prim and proper and
posh, just bomb into the pools and just have fun. (Tess)
...The kids just playing together, harmless, inexpensive fun and healthy outdoor activity. You
know, not stuck inside. // The other thing that was probably, for me it was the safety aspect,
that nobody was concerned. (Ann)
I’ve got childhood holiday, swimming, boating. (Belinda)
Small town life, laid back people, family. (Ann)
...That’s exactly what we used to do. I said to my kids. Every weekend down at the
Hobsonville pool. (Belinda)
But yeah, we just used to go down with the key and have a swim [in the school pool] and walk
home and, so yeah that was quite typical. We’d all meet down there, or you’d plan with your
friends to meet there at certain times and so yeah that was very typical of, you know, all
catching up together. (Sharon)
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Participants: Farming, football, farming, rugby. The scenery, mountains and the lakes and
the land. (Ingrid)
Definitely that and I think, I think, Ingrid might have mentioned it and I agree but that,
something about the simplicity. I’m just trying to think where (pause), sort of, I think it
captures work ethic and Ingrid’s work ethics, determined... Yep. Integrity, honesty, I think
those sorts of things. Smallness, being in a little country is good. Connections. (Jackie)
...It’s that whole friendships take a long time and we don’t jump into anything, bit more
reserved. (Georgina)
Prefers some space. Being alone sometimes. Reserved. (Helen)
Deep set part of the culture is the link with the land. Always want to live on a farm. Get hands
dirty. Honourable existence.// The humour is in there too, they were subtle but they’re good.
(Georgina)
...I feel sentimentally touched by it and that’s partly the voice and the music, plus the scenery.
It suggests good old times in New Zealand really. // There was something unpretentious so
again it probably fits in with some of the things we’ve sort of said. Unpretentious, talking
directly to you, he’s not telling you, he’s not preaching or… (Jackie)
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Participants: Yeah, the Rotorua-ness, oh see, that’s Maori. The haka, Maori. The little
pictures, Maori. The koru, Maori. (Waverley)
And the practical people, like, sort of like look, the people there looked kind of practical-ish.
It didn’t look like, also that no class system that I had in mine, it looked like ‘all into
together’, kind of, that was the, you felt that when watching the ad, ‘cause there was netball
and family and sports and stuff, so it felt like here we are, a big happy family, or community.
(Virginia)
The silver fern, the gumboot, the... football, the skiing, the things that we do when we’re ...on
holiday. (Waverley)
I think though, if you haven’t been out of New Zealand you wouldn’t know some of those
things were only New Zealand. (Virginia)
That’s amazing, didn’t really need to do this previous interview [about national identity]. It
was all on there wasn’t it? // I had the heroes, the sports people, the All Blacks, they were in
there. But I do see all those things just totally relate to being New Zealand. (Helen)
Makes me feel good about all the Kiwi stuff. (Lana)
Well there you go. I know the music. // Stereotypes. Did they have a lady in curlers, they
probably did, although, they had the girl doing the hula-hoop. (Karen)
14
Tucker is a colloquial term for food (Source: NZ Oxford Dictionary)
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Participants: No. 8 wire can fix anything. Most men are useful. Women get stuck in and do
stuff. (Pippa)
It was all about DIY. (Olivia)
Can-do attitude. (Pippa)
I’m not getting snobbery. Mixing with people from all walks of life. // Kind of in a way not
daunted by meeting high profile people, it’s kind of like I’d say, “Gidday,” to him if I was in
Mitre 10, you know? //Yeah. He’s doing everything physically, you know, big strong. //New
Zealanders come from hardworking average settlers. (Ann)
Oh God he looks like a real West Auckland Kiwi. // Those guys are lovely, those guys like that
are lovely usually. You know, they’re really down to earth. You can tell he is, gentle giant.
(Belinda)
Yeah. Bloke, bloke. (Cathy)
Just people getting on with it and getting a job done.// DIY. Humour. (Sharon)
Doing the right thing. // It is a little bit sort of like Australian, “Oh, we’re big, we build
things big, big is good.” Whereas Kiwis aren’t really so much into ... (Tess)
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Participants: ...That’s very New Zealand of course because it’s all our icons, eh? (Marcia)
You said [while viewing, but not captured by recorder] “Maori art, fish and chips, green
grass.” (Researcher)
Yeah it has got the sense of humour. (Nicola)
We can laugh at ourselves, eh? (Marcia)
I find it a bit sort of over the top, though I think it’s got every theme that I have mentioned.
(Ingrid)
The rivalry. (Jackie)
The, yeah, sporting themes. Those dastardly Australians. (Ingrid)
It definitely appeals to, it’s got a more jingoistic feel to it, yeah. (Jackie)
The kiwiana thing’s huge in that. And sport. Watch many types of sport. ‘Cause that had the
America’s Cup, it had the rugby in it. It had the Maori stuff in it with the tattoo. Oh it had
the, our No. 8 mentality, our ingenuity, great inventions and ideas, it had that with the Wright
brothers on it, [refers to New Zealander Richard Pearse whose first flight was supposedly
before the Wright brothers] I think that ad, really is really, really New Zealand, I love that
ad. (Ann)
I think it’s a dig at the Australians. // ..You just have that little rivalry thing going on between
us at the moment, which is all good fun, because it’s all tongue and cheek when you’re over
there. You know, they give us a hard time, we give them a hard time. (Belinda)
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Participants: Yeah, I think that’s great ‘cause that’s also a key thing for New Zealanders is
that we punch above our weight and even though we’re very insignificant on the world stand
we have had a lot of critical stances that have been, like quite exceptional really. (Georgina)
You know how, clean and green thing happening, you know. Kiwis just getting on and doing
and not worrying about what everybody else is necessarily doing. Saying no to, you know,
just because some of the bigger countries are saying yes doesn’t mean that we have to sort of
thing. (pause) Yeah, the only country that’s nuclear free. We’re only little but we say no it’s
worth it, that’s exactly what you said there. (Tess)
Yeah. That are our values. But I remember thinking at the end of it, “Oh, no, it’s advertising
beer.” (Waverley)
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15
Speedos are an Australian brand of men’s racing swimming briefs generally reserved for competition
swimming, not usually worn as casual beachwear in New Zealand
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Participants: ...They’ve made it quite kiwiana by putting a lot of kiwiana little things in the
background, yeah. (Cathy)
And that’s showing too that, you know, he did lose his keys and he got a lot of help to find
them. That was the good, that’s a real Kiwi thing, eh, everyone pitches in. (Donna)
Mm. Yeah, can-do attitude, we will find your keys and ... (Cathy)
Yeah, “Don’t worry mate, we’ll help you out." (Donna)
So I think that was part of the travelling, the holidays, and all that and so we’ve all seen
those scenes, bits and pieces of New Zealand, so that’s why we would probably like the ad
‘cause we’d think, “Oh shit, we’ve been here.” (Cathy)
And the sort of the casual, the casual dress of the people on the beach and… (Ingrid)
...Maybe this, the closest it might come to any of our ideas about neighbourhood. (Jackie)
And I put here, memories of community being a safe place. (Fiona)
Yeah. And that’s where that freedom sort of comes in, doesn’t it, you know. (Elaine)
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Participants: Definitely the drinking.// Yeah, just that, sort of, you know with the drinking
comes that sort of socialising and relaxed lifestyle and that sort of thing that Kiwis enjoy to
do. // Yeah making jokes of things, having a few beers together.//...Not taking things so
seriously, laid back, good sense of humour.// Man in, men in the women’s showers and, you
know, can’t, we don’t actually have to take things so literally and so serious. You can get a
bit of a laugh out of it, whereas that could offend people in other countries. (Tess)
..I mean from the women’s side of it they’re just getting on with it and doing the job. (Sharon)
Well mine is, rural atmosphere. (Karen)
I think a Kiwi thing that I could have said on my list but didn’t is that the guys are quite, you
know, they’re quite hard-case and just, you know? (Lana)
It typifies us Kiwi women today though. She can do anything. (Marcia)
Nicola, you said “Kiwi bloke not that appealing. No finesse, no chivalry. Doesn’t like to
dress up, doesn’t make an effort.”(Researcher)
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Participants: Oh well, definitely. I mean the weekends sports. Can-do attitude, family’s at
the sports with you. You know, mum and dad goes with you. I think it’s all, oh I mean, a lot of
it, it’s in there. You know, yeah tough mental attitude, can-do attitude, you know, all that’s in
here. You know, sports being this huge thing in New Zealand and that and, you know, and the
community thing of having big fat breakfasts when you get home, you know, everything like
that. I think it’s all, there’s a lot of it in here. Yeah. (Cathy)
Yeah. And accidents. Even down this bit here where you say accidents happen, learn from,
just getting in there and whatever goes wrong you just, it’s all part of it... The, taking the
injuries or whatever, it’s all just part of the experience. (Fiona)
Yeah. I mean you’ve got here, sports plays a big part in family life. Parents and kids play.
They’ll want to coach and manage teams, value of sport, and running around for the
transport. I mean, and that is completely it isn’t it? Yeah. (Elaine)
I’ve been talking to our German home stay and she can’t believe that we play whatever the
weather, it has to be hailing for us not to play netball, like it, can’t believe that there would
be anything that will be important enough to us to stand out and get soaked and kids put
themselves at risk, you see kids nose diving into the mud and boots and it’s that, it’s the most
important thing at that moment, on Saturday morning. (Fiona)
...To some degree it had that male doing the rugby, male being the referee, people on the
sideline assumed to be the wives and family and who cooked the baked beans at the end, I
think we assumed it was the wife didn’t we? (Olivia)
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Participants: And it pretty much says how important sport is in New Zealand, because most
kids play sport of some form, don’t they? I mean our kids, you know, they’ve all done
something sports orientated haven’t they, it seems to be a big thing on sport in New Zealand.
// I just think, you see, that definitely goes with equal opportunity in New Zealand, anyone if
they try hard enough can end up like that. (Belinda)
Heroes, the sports people who are often in the media. Well I didn’t put Hamish Carter16, but
you know? (Helen)
Yeah, I’ve said we put sports people up on pedestal and you can certainly see that there.
(Karen)
We’ve such a small country, sports people who do well and excel are admired (Lana)
They’re ideals and our values. (Waverley)
Carter. Hamish Carter, giving the medal to the girl, it’s the mixing of the cultures, the famous
and everyday people, the sharing, I think there’s a sharing of knowledge, yeah, and things,
sharing of skills. (Virginia)
...You can be a beekeeper and be working on farm down in Hikamatua and then fifty years
later you can be on the world map. (Waverley)
16
Hamish Carter, an Aucklander, won a 2004 Olympic gold medal for the triathlon
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After discussing the presence of key themes in an advertisement, participants were asked
“Has [insert brand name] been successful in suggesting New Zealandness in a way that
matches up with your themes?” Despite participants identifying several key themes in every
situation, this question did not automatically translate into an affirmative answer. Selected
illustrations of positive and negative responses are provided next with some of the reasoning
behind them.
The Bell tea Generations story vivified a combination of the highest rating elements from the
key themes exercise; holidays/ritual escape to the wild, family values/staying in touch,
outdoor life, importance of the beach and informality. Responses to this were strong and
positive,
Definitely. (Helen)
It epitomises the typical Kiwi. (Georgina)
Yeah. (Helen)
Well that’s what we aspire to on the, for summer holidays that’s what everybody wants, all
the generations getting together ... (Georgina)
I can relate to being right there. (Helen)
And Bell is also a product that’s been along with New Zealand for all those generations too,
it’s something, it’s a brand that we’ve come to know as a standard anyway so, it’s not a new
name that we’re trying to merge with another Kiwi concept. (Georgina)
Bell tea Generations also echoed participants’ stories of past and future desires for family
holidays at beachside baches where simple pleasures and modest surroundings are treasured,
despite the realisation that such humble abodes come at a price. The positive response about
portraying New Zealandness comes from the degree to which the brand’s story resonated
with their values and life experiences, or those that they could identify as a part of a
nationally shared/usable past.
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Weet-bix Generations, which reportedly embodied a relatively small number of themes, was
rated as being very successful in suggesting New Zealandness, as illustrated in comments by
Ingrid and Jackie. The themes they identified in the advertisement were central to their own
autobiographical narratives. Also, the consideration of past stories from the brand and the
advertising halo effect of long term, consistent brand values are reflected in their responses.
Yeah, I think, well I think it does. I think it, I think looking into those images is quite
distinctive and, yeah the thing about kids being quite involved and willing to give sport a go
is reflected in that. (Ingrid)
Yeah, absolutely, and also ‘cause what I remember about Weet-bix and ads is that it is
always associated with some All Black or some sporting personality having eight or ten
Weet-bix and building themselves up and I think of Weet-bix as being essentially a New
Zealand thing. (Jackie)
However, in an advertisement that made a direct appeal to national pride and had a jingoistic
feel to it (and the expert panel had identified many elements of national identity embedded in
it), Kiwibank It’s ours did not offer much that was recognisable to Sharon and Tess. Unlike
some other participants, they could not recognise many key themes, they did not like the
advertisement, and could not identify with the story.
In the DB Export Over the fence advertisement more than 18 different NID themes were
identified. Some of the themes, such as beer/drinking alcohol, young generation is different,
and male dominated had negative connotations and were less commonly mentioned NID
themes in the overall study (refer to Table 7). Despite all recognising numerous themes, not
every participant was convinced that New Zealandness was strongly suggested by the
particular combination of NID themes. Several comments revealed that apart from the
obvious visual cues which clearly set the story in New Zealand, the overall feeling was not
distinctly of New Zealand and could equally represent Australian identity. Participants also
volunteered that they were not brand fans and reported low levels of beer consumption. DB
Export did not provide a story that resonated with their own lives, nor did it represent a New
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Zealand identity that they could imagine or that highlighted the personal qualities,
community practices and myths which they held most dear. Karen and Lana summarised their
estimation of the advertisement in this way:
I don’t know whether it’s totally Kiwi, because it’s quite a general theme of community.
(Lana)
But that’s, you get places in Aussie, I guess they’re, you know, I mean … (Karen)
And I think you can do, have fraternities, maybe in America doing the same type of thing.
(Lana)
Similar thing but the houses would be a bit different, but yeah. (Karen)
Participants were asked to think of other brands that made them feel the way they do about
New Zealand (i.e. brands that had not been the subject of advertisements viewed earlier). It is
important to note that participants were not asked to limit themselves to brands that they
actually purchased and/or used, thus, they named any brands that connected with their
feelings about New Zealandness. This question was designed to identify a broad range of
brand resources available to the whole national community. Most (but not all) discussion
about such brands was anchored to memorable ads.
Although a long list was generated, the brands mentioned by three or more pairs, starting
with the most frequently mentioned, are: Tui (beer), Toyota (vehicles), Speight’s (beer),
Anchor (dairy foods), ASB (bank), Chesdale (cheese), Ford (cars), L&P (carbonated
beverage), Lion (beer), Mainland (dairy foods), Marmite (savoury spread), Tip Top (ice
cream), Adidas (sports gear and apparel), Air New Zealand (airline), Edmonds’ (baking
products), Fisher and Paykel (appliances), Icebreaker (clothing), Sanitarium (foods), Wattie’s
(foods) and Weet-bix (cereal).
The complete list of brands generated by this question included several whose origins are not
in New Zealand but whose brand engendered a New Zealand feeling in some participants,
perhaps due to long time usage, familiarity, embeddedness in New Zealand culture and
linkages with New Zealand through marketing communications activities: Toyota, Ford,
Adidas, Cadbury (confectionery), Milo (tonic drink), BP (fuels), KFC (fast food),
McDonald’s (fast food), Mini (car), Morris 1000 (cars), Nescafe (instant coffee), Stihl
(chainsaws) and Wii (home video game consoles).
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In the following sub-sections the elements of the brands that revealed or contributed to New
Zealandness in this exercise are illustrated.
Participants commented on consumption of brands in the past, and/or over a long period of
time. Often, it was implicit in their comments that the brands were dominant in the market.
Mostly, participants did not mention advertisements in conjunction with these brands, and
indeed many could not think of any specific marketing campaigns when prompted.
Isn’t it funny lots of these iconic brands it doesn’t, it’s not about the ads ‘cause they’ve just
always been around. (Lana)
That’s how they’re known. (Karen)
Brand examples include Georgie Pie, Swanndri, Edmonds, Macpac, Fairydown, Norsewear,
Ugg boots, Farmers, Nescafe, Wattie’s, Adidas, Ford and Tui. Selected participant comments
are accompanied by some explanations of brand stories and history.
About hunting and fishing and wearing Swanndri. When you say Swanndri you, I always
think Kiwi. (Cathy)
The story of this brand follows: “In 1913 Taranaki tailor William Broome, frustrated by the
incessant New Zealand rain developed a work shirt with a secret waterproofing. The work
shirt, made from one hundred percent pure New Zealand wool was fabled for its durability
and practicality and quickly became the choice of pioneering New Zealanders the length and
breadth of the country.”
What about things like Macpac for me that’s a big one, you know, ‘cause you got your
Macpac pack to go overseas. And you can see Kiwis when they come in through the airport,
“Ah Macpac.” (Karen)
From beginnings in New Zealand in 1973 “Macpac has developed into one of the world’s
most trusted manufacturers of top quality outdoor equipment and clothing.”
http://www.macpac.co.nz/company-info/macpac-history. This brand was experiencing huge
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growth and developing export markets during the 1980s and 1990s when the participants of
this study would have been undertaking OE.
The tomatoes, Wattie’s tomato sauce, I remember that being a really big thing, growing up
with Wattie’s tomato sauce. (Elaine)
“Wattie’s Tomato Sauce is New Zealand’s favourite tomato sauce. It’s the taste that Kiwis
know and love. When we think of Kiwi icons, Wattie’s Tomato Sauce is almost always
mentioned.” http://www.watties.co.nz/html/products/sauces.asp
Edmonds. I don’t think there’s a house in New Zealand that doesn’t have the Edmonds
cookbook tucked away there somewhere. (Georgina)
The success of Edmonds baking powder and other baking ingredients has been eclipsed by
Edmonds cookbook, a marketing device originally designed to promote the baking products.
“The Edmonds cookery book has sold over 3 million copies since it was first published in
1907, making it the best-selling New Zealand book by far. The first edition was a 50-page
pamphlet of recipes promoting Thomas John Edmonds’ baking powder and jellies through
‘economical everyday recipes and cooking hints’. Over the years the Edmonds cookery book
has come to be seen as an icon of national identity”
http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/media/photo/edmonds-cookbook
Another dimension of brands that made participants feel the way they do about New Zealand
relates to brand reputation and symbolic values of brand pertinent to an external audience. In
several cases the nominated brands were considered to be very high quality and made of
distinctive ingredients closely linked to New Zealand— ‘Brand New Zealand’ was
represented by these brands and as an extension, the quality of New Zealand people. The
excellence and uniqueness of the brand as a symbol of New Zealandness in the eyes of
foreigners was uppermost in Georgina’s mind when she nominated these.
Cloudy Bay. When I lived New Zealand [she then corrects herself], in England for a long time
it was, that was the one we’d get and take to parties to show off our New Zealandness.
(Georgina)
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I always take overseas now 42BELOW vodkas because they’re passionfruit and feijoa.
(Georgina)
This brand styles itself as follows: “42BELOW vodka was launched in 1998 in the premium
vodka segment. The brand, known for its innovative, mischievous and entrepreneurial style,
has earned a strong reputation for authentic New Zealand purity, quality and exceptional
taste. This is reflected in the winning of numerous prestigious international awards.
42BELOW vodka is currently distributed in more than 30 countries.” www.42below.com
Furthermore, the passionfruit and feijoa variants represent exotic fruit flavours virtually
unknown in the major markets, especially New York and Los Angeles. This sense of
otherness helps link the brand with a particular geographical location, New Zealand.
The scenery and particularly iconic New Zealand locations featuring in advertisements were
the factors that prompted participants to nominate some brands that help them feel the way
they do about New Zealand.
Icebreaker with their imagery ... I’m just thinking of their imagery in their literature and their
catalogues and things, yeah typically mountains and sheep and people doing outdoors stuff
and I think it’s probably pretty similar to what it, yeah, to how it has been. (Ingrid)
Icebreaker pure New Zealand merino clothing stresses its high country origins in marketing
communications using, for example, dramatic photography of remote snow mountains and
pristine alpine lakes, rivers and valleys. These types of wilderness images are a central
feature of catalogues and brochures, in-store display materials and the Icebreaker website.
Yeah, there’s quite a few Speight’s ads that show a lot of New Zealand scenery and ... (Tess)
Speight’s slogan, Pride of the South, refers to origins in Otago, and their communications
feature distinctive landscapes and rural settings characteristic of the south of New Zealand.
Recognition of such places is part of the shared sense of belonging to New Zealand and
having New Zealand national identity.
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The music which features in some brand advertisements brings New Zealand to mind very
strongly and was the main reason why brands were nominated. This was illustrated earlier in
Interislander advertising.
The Warratahs [the band is a New Zealand country music institution], yep. Yeah, so
straightaway you feel connected to New Zealand listening to some Kiwi music on an ad.
(Donna)
[Air New Zealand] Well it’s started using music. It makes it much more memorable for
people now to associate. (Georgina)
[after discussing a particular Air New Zealand ad execution, Georgina continues]
Yeah, Dance Exponents [a New Zealand rock group formed in 1981] isn’t it? I think.
(Georgina)
It’s the New Zealand music that they have in the ads, makes you think more New Zealand.
Obviously Kiwibank. (Virginia)
Both Kiwibank and NZI have recently utilised versions of the New Zealand national anthem
in their television advertisements which cued feelings of New Zealandness in this study’s
viewers.
A common reason for nominating brands in this exercise was that a particularly memorable
brand advertisement reproduced a myth or essential story that New Zealanders tell each other
about themselves as a whole. This also encompassed aspects of community practices and
personal qualities that are considered ‘very Kiwi’. Brand advertisers in this category
included: L&P, Steinlager, Wattie’s, Fernleaf/Anchor (specifically, the long-running family
saga), Genesis, Lion Red, Toyota, Weet-bix, Tui, Speight’s, ASB, Big Wednesday, Spray &
Walk Away, NZI and ANZ. A selection of text units is provided to illustrate the inclusion of
myths.
There’s an ANZ ad on at the moment that’s quite, shows the whole, uh, just trying to think,
overseas people coming in and saying how helpful we are and she helps them. The kid cried
the whole way and blah blah blah and wee Hamish from Aberdeen, yeah, and how helpful we
were. There’s that, that whole do the right thing, just, we like to, you know, help in the ....
(Tess)
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Love the L&P one, world famous in New Zealand, that’s just, that was just so cool. And
again that’s that kind of whole thing what we were saying eh, that sort of humble, tongue in
cheek, kind of, yeah, we think we’re pretty cool but we don’t need to kind of shove it in your
face. It’s just that little, little famous in New Zealand. (Elaine)
Oh yes, ASB bank. Yeah the, there is something there that he [Goldstein] taps into things that
are about New Zealand that we will understand that the American guy doesn’t. (Jackie)
[ASB Goldstein] Yeah, he’s out in the farm and he’s out visiting people and he’s blown away
by the flock of cows [pun on herd/heard of cows?] and all that sort of stuff that he talks about.
(Sharon)
So yeah it’s definitely a foreigner coming in but he’s getting better, like he’s getting to know
his way around New Zealand. (Tess)
And the other Toyota, the, “Bugger me,” ads. They’re very Kiwi. They’re probably the most
down to earth Kiwi ads, as far as attitude is concerned. (Pippa)
The use of New Zealand celebrity endorsers (mostly sports people) was another notable point
made by participants. The following brands and associated celebrities were mentioned: Fisher
& Paykel (Silver Ferns national netball team), Wii (netballer Irene Van Dyke and rugby
player Michael Jones), Adidas (All Blacks), Tip Top trumpet (Rachel Hunter), New Zealand
Beef & Lamb (Olympic gold medallists Sarah Ulmer, Georgina and Caroline Evers-Swindell)
and Ford (All Blacks). Several pairs mentioned Tip Top trumpet unprompted,
but telling comments from a pair who were actually shown this brand’s recent advertising
earlier in the session (Simplifying Summer campaign) are also provided.
The first thing I think of when I see that is Rachel Hunter. (Marcia)
Oh yeah, yeah. Trumpet. (Nicola)
Yeah, and her little car. Yep. Yep. (Marcia)
In the beetle. (Nicola)
Yeah, that was very New Zealand, only because she represents New Zealand and she is New
Zealand, that’s what that brings back for me. (Marcia)
Rachel Hunter is an Auckland born international model and celebrity, also famous for
marrying rock star Rod Stewart. Tip Top Trumpet advertising featuring Rachel Hunter
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launched her career in 1985 and apart from a brief rerun in 2007 has not screened on
television for many years. Rachel Hunter’s supermodel status registers very strongly with the
cohort in this study and there is continuing media profiling of her Los Angeles based
celebrity lifestyle in local publications.
Another trigger for proposing a brand in this exercise was memories of experiences and
responses to past advertising stories. One pair of participants recalled reactions to brand
advertisements in connection with their own younger years or in relation to raising their own
children.
Years ago I used to love the Kentucky Fried Chicken ad because, when they had Hugo and
thing in the back of the car. (Belinda)
Oh Hugo said you go and... (Ann)
‘Cause we used to go out for family outings and we used to be in the back car and Dad says,
“Let’s go and get Kentucky Fried,” (laughter) (Belinda)
“Weet-bix kids, Kiwi kids,” I mean you can sing that song over and over again, can’t you?
(Belinda)
Oh, you know that, “Kiwi kids are Weet-bix kids.” (Ann)
Yeah. Yeah, yeah. (Belinda)
My kids when they were like this high used to go absolutely nuts. I had to tape that ad
because it would make them dance and they’d go nuts when they heard that, “Kiwi kids are
Weet-bix kids,” song. (Ann)
One final element which contributes to making participants feel the way they do about New
Zealand is brand placement in a movie. The brand Mini was nominated because of its starring
role in the anarchic road movie Goodbye Pork Pie (1980), which captured themes of
mateship as the characters travelled the length of New Zealand.
If it was vehicles I’d say probably for me it’s like Minis because who do we know that hasn’t
had a Mini or you haven’t had a flatmate with a Mini and there was ‘Goodbye Pork Pie’.
(Karen)
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In the various examples above the participants noted how brand stories have reminded them
of some aspect of New Zealandness. However, in the following example, life experiences
cause Belinda to recall a particular brand story about Mainland cheese when she visited the
South Island (affectionately called ‘the Mainland’ by many of its inhabitants). Although she
identified a contrast between herself and the characters she nonetheless recognised the
portrayal of certain distinctive characteristics that are central to imagined views of New
Zealand national identity.
I can remember thinking that when I was in the South Island. I remember thinking, “These
people are just like the exact people on there [the Mainland cheese ad, where good things
take time].” I can remember relating to it when I was there, ‘cause I was, you know, my sister
in-law’s from the South Island so we went down to their wedding and like they’re just like a
little bit slower than us. Slower, not mentally slower, but their lifestyle’s slower. We’re more
rushed and stressed and … (Belinda)
Later, participants were asked whether they used or bought their nominated brands, and if so,
was this in any way linked to the feeling of New Zealandness that they got from the brand. It
was not uncommon for pairs to have opposing responses regarding brand purchase or usage,
where perhaps one person held a strong opinion and the other was neutral. About one third of
answers were negative—that is, they did not use or buy the nominated brands for themselves
or in their roles as parents, spouses or household shoppers. Spontaneous comments about
motivations for buying or not buying/using were generated. Some probing was also used to
tease out reasons for their responses and these are categorised below, starting with the
negative reactions. It is important to note that while participants reported brand consumption
only in the tangible sense of eating, wearing, driving, using etc, this question did not capture
consumption constituted by mediated experiences of the brand via mass media, in-store (and
within the wider community environment).
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There were five types of reasons clearly articulated for participants not buying the brands
they had nominated. The biggest reason was that although they had formerly been consumers
of the brands, their needs and/or perceptions of quality had changed, especially in relation to
perceived healthiness of food products—KFC, Big Ben (meat pies), Chesdale (processed
cheese), Anchor (butter), Chelsea (sugar)—or availability of more sophisticated substitutes—
Nescafe (instant coffee) and Chardon (cheap local sparkling wine). Positive historical links
and brand experiences were still in their memories but as consumers they had moved on.
[Big Ben] Not anymore, not when I saw what goes into it. (laughter) (Belinda)
[Chardon] Not anymore, we’ve gravitated to the nicer stuff haven’t we darling? Yep. Yep.
(Marcia)
Although it was nominated, Georgie Pie (fast food chain of pie retailers) cannot be
considered by consumers because operations were discontinued after being sold to
McDonald’s in 1996. Despite the brand being deleted there is still popular support for it,
including Facebook groups promoting the return of the brand. See, for example,
Bring Back Georgie Pie: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2579657422
Another key reason for not using or buying nominated brands is because participants were
not (and had never been) in the target market. Even though they perceived the product
offering to be suited to other types of consumers, they appreciated the feeling of New
Zealandness in the brand and had consumed (and even enjoyed) the brand stories and
advertising over many years. These heavily advertised brands included beers (where the
women were not beer drinkers)—Steinlager, Tui, Speight’s, Lion—and Toyota Hilux
(perceived by some as suitable only for farmers), and the Mad Butcher (retail stores). Peter
Leitch aka the Mad Butcher, the owner of an eponymous chain of butchery stores, is well
known as the radio advertising voice promoting “quality meat at reasonable prices” and is a
charismatic personality, a ‘true blue Kiwi’ who from humble beginnings and with hard work
has become almost a working class hero. While the Mad Butcher brand has familiarity and a
real feeling of New Zealandness for Olivia, her perceptions are that their quality is not what
she is looking for.
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Several participants felt that ASB had a New Zealand feel to it, but this feeling had developed
since they originally chose a different bank. As entrenched customers of another bank, the
costs of switching to a new bank, such as ASB, were perceived as being too high.
I started working there [at ANZ and opened an account there] and it’s too hard to change.
(Sharon)
The final reason for not buying and using a brand was because it was very costly. Marcia and
Nicola grew up in the neighbourhood where Line 7 (a casual and active wear clothing brand
which originally marketed wet weather clothing for sailors) was manufactured. For them, the
brand engendered strong feelings of New Zealandness but, as Nicola comments, Line 7
hoodies and track pants were:
Overall, it seems likely that more extensive probing would have uncovered other reasons for
not buying nominated brands. Surprisingly, when declaring that they did not buy or use their
nominated brands none of the participants mentioned preferred substitute brands.
There were many nominated brands which the participants used or bought but their reasons
for doing so were not directly because of a New Zealand feel about the brands. In the
examples that follow it can be seen that participants had different motivations for buying and
using these brands. One reason was because the product had superior quality, guarantees
and/or service as a result of being New Zealand made (now or in the past). Brands in this
category include Fisher & Paykel (appliances), New Zealand beef & lamb, Anchor (dairy
foods), Mainland (Cheese), Swanndri (clothing).
[Fisher & Paykel] It’s supposed to be quite, well it’s not made in New Zealand anymore but
up until now it’s been made in New Zealand. The service and the guarantees are lot more
better. (Belinda)
I only buy New Zealand lamb, I haven’t seen, I wouldn’t buy any lamb from anywhere else.
(Ann)
The next common reason for buying was because of good product quality and value, where
the branded item was fit for purpose. Participants appeared to have strong brand loyalty
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relating to Toyota, The Warehouse (low cost general merchandise retailer), Edmonds (baking
products), Lion (beer), and Anchor (dairy products).
[Toyota] I have a strong sense of loyalty to them but it’s not about being New Zealandness.
It’s a lot of the things that they are as a company. (Fiona)
Similarly, although participants did not personally consume the brand, family members
preferred or insisted on its purchase—for example McDonald’s, Hellers (bacon, ham and
small goods), Speight’s (beer), Wattie’s (prepared foods) and Toyota.
[Wattie’s] I’m not a big tomato sauce person but my, definitely in terms of the baked beans
the kids will know definitely or spaghetti if it’s… (Jackie)
[Toyota Hilux] My husband constantly. We’ve got three of them on our driveway at the
moment. I think it’s more the hardiness and the fact that he can pull it apart and it matches
with other vehicles, that he can build them ... (Sharon)
Some participants qualified their brand loyalty, suggesting that although the brands were
preferred by them they would not always buy them. They typically factor in other
considerations or would only buy if they could afford it. Brands in this category include Air
New Zealand, Ford, Mini, Dulux, Wattie’s (prepared foods), Tip Top (ice cream and frozen
confectionery), Anchor (dairy products), and Mainland (cheese).
[Mainland] I feel really aggrieved when it’s not on special and I have to buy something else.
(laughter) (Fiona)
[Mainland] I love their Vintage Cheddar which if I’m doing a cheese board I’ll generally go
with that one but for everyday just what’s cheapest and it has come down heaps in price.
(Karen)
The following text-units are a little convoluted but Jackie was trying to say that even though
Wattie’s is sometimes manufactured overseas now (a negative factor), she would probably
trust Wattie’s rather than other brands.
[Wattie’s] Yeah possibly, but, some of their things are not made here now though. (Ingrid)
No, but I guess in light of, I mean it’s probably a complicated decision but one would think,
this might be if I was looking at two things and I thought it was made here and I thought
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given everything else was equal I’d probably go for Wattie’s as opposed to something I
thought wasn’t. (Jackie)
With a slightly different take on the pricing issue, the following brands would be purchased
simply because they were the cheapest offering at the time of purchase. DB export (beer),
Speight’s (beer), Wattie’s (prepared foods), Anchor (dairy products), Mainland (cheese), Tip
Top (ice cream and frozen confectionery).
Another factor cited as impacting on purchase behaviour was deliberate support for New
Zealand brands—the Buy New Zealand made or Buy local effect. Support for local businesses
was important in the following instances.
[Nobilo’s wines] Well that’s my loyalty for the West Auckland vineyards because I know a lot
of those families I guess. Yeah and we’ve had work [through a family business], we work for
Nobilo’s. (Belinda)
[Air New Zealand] I would have wanted to be on our own airline thinking, “Oh well at least
it’s coming back into our own country,” and it’s paying the wages. (Cathy)
The final reason for buying or using a nominated brand was because the product was unique,
as in the case of Possum merino knitwear (which is not strictly a brand but was considered to
be by participants).
The combination [of superfine merino wool and fur], the combination’s definitely quite
distinctive. (Ingrid)
In this final section participants claimed that they bought and used their nominated brands in
part, at least, because of the New Zealand feeling they got from them.
(savoury spread), Milo (milk beverage), Interislander (ferry service), Macpac (outdoor
equipment and clothing), Norsewear (woollen outerwear), Red band (gumboots/Wellington
boots), Lion (beer), Cadbury, Speight’s (beer), Wattie’s (prepared foods), Vegemite (savoury
spread), Edmonds (baking products), Farmers (department store).
Rashuns…? (Researcher)
…yep, but when I, I actually only buy them for special occasions. (Lana)
For parties or something, eh? (Karen)
‘Cause they’re bloody messy and they’re crap. (Lana)
Well Kris would want to eat them all the time if I brought them, so I can’t. (Karen)
Same. But they’re very New Zealand and it’s just the nostalgic thing again. (Lana)
[Marmite] For me, it’s one of those, it’s just, we always had it as kids, it was just so much
part of childhood that that’s something we want to, our kids to have access to. (Fiona)
[Adidas] Well I do because it’s black and white. (laughter) And you associate it with our
national sports teams. (Tess)
In the following text-units Karen, who was born on a farm and lives on the outskirts of the
city in a semi-rural locality, feels that her Red band boots completely define her as a New
Zealander linked to the land, and that this is affirmed in the responses from others who see
her wearing her Red bands. For her, only genuine Red band boots (as opposed to cheaper
substitutes) would generate this effect.
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[L&P] When we have family from overseas come we have to stock up on L&P because they
don’t get it, oh if they want to get it over there it costs a lot of money. (Donna)
So it’s a sort of a Kiwi thing? (Researcher)
It is for them, yep, they come home and they, you gotta make sure you got L&P and Rashuns
and things. (Donna)
Raro and Rashuns and Pineapple Lumps. (Cathy)
And I would buy some so that our exchange student would know what L&P was. (Fiona)
Totally. (Elaine)
Because it’s so distinctive too, you won’t find L&P anywhere else. (Fiona)
No. Yeah, no. And when we’ve got overseas visitors we stock up on it. We’ll purposely go and
buy it. Marie’s birthday, we had bottles of it, on the display, on the kiwiana table that we did,
and everything. But yeah, it was definitely, definitely, even, we’ve even taken them to Paeroa
[The historical birthplace of the brand represented by the P in L&P]. Had a photo taken with
the bottle. So, definitely. (laughter) (Elaine)
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[Icebreaker] Because, I don’t know, it’s New Zealand wool, it’s grown here and I sort of grew
up with wearing woollen clothing from a young age and I guess it’s sort of hung over from
that. I mean when we lived in the US I can’t remember seeing any woollen clothing that is
now available here and there’s quite a lot available here. I can’t remember seeing, I can’t
remember a single store that I would have seen it in. (Ingrid)
[NZI] Well I guess initially NZI being New Zealand you feel like you’re supporting a New
Zealand company, but we’ve been with NZI for sixteen, seventeen years now, I couldn’t tell
you now whether they actually are New Zealand owned. I know NZI is a very small portion of
a much larger company, so I don’t know. (Tess)
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Well ‘cause there’s a big Ford Holden thing and so you’re either a Ford or a Holden person.
(Donna)
Yeah, you are a Ford or a Holden. (Cathy)
And just because Holden’s Australia out of protest I wouldn’t, I’d rather have a Ford.
(Donna)
(laughter) You’ve got your blue shirt on as well! (Researcher)
Yeah! (Cathy)
That’s what my New Zealandness would be, yeah, I think. (Donna)
Finally, there are sponsorship arrangements that give some brands a feeling of New
Zealandness that directly contribute to why participants use or buy. Examples in this category
include Ford (All Blacks), Adidas (All Blacks) and Mainland cheese (supporters of ‘Save the
Hoiho’ native yellow eyed penguin).
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The second research question in this thesis is, ‘what are the social processes affecting
national identity through brand experiences?’ Participants were asked about talking to other
people about advertisements and brand stories. The findings illustrate the various different
situations where brand stories played a role. However, the importance of using the particular
two-part and pair interview protocol to get useful answers to the research question is
illustrated in the first sub-section that follows.
It became clear very quickly that participants often did not want to admit watching television
advertisements and claimed that they rarely, if ever saw them. Despite asserting this,
comments made later in the conversations suggested that all participants regularly watched
some television advertising.
I mean we pretty much mute them here. It’s your chance to go to the toilet and make a cup of
coffee. (Elaine)
So, most of the time, truthfully though, the ads get, the TV gets changed over between them to
see what else is on. And having Sky with no ads, don’t get to see many at all these days.
(Donna)
During the course of the interviews several participants launched into detailed descriptions of
ads they had seen, only to realise that they had been speaking rather too knowledgeably about
something that they generally considered not worthy of discussion and almost socially
undesirable as a conversational topic.
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Furthermore, as it turns out in the example above, Waverley attributed the story to the wrong
brand—the brand was actually Street’s Cornetto not Tip Top Trumpet, who offer a very
similar product.
There was also general reticence about admitting talking to anyone about advertisements and
brand stories. Donna declared that the only conversations with others that she would have
about brands would be strictly product related.
I mean my mum would ring me and say, “Briscoe’s [a competitively priced homeware
retailer] has got two for one,” but that’s about it. (Donna)
Yeah. Yeah. “Go and get the kids some school shoes.” Yeah. Yeah, they’ve got a sale on,
yeah. (Cathy)
At first, only a few participants directly admitted talking to other people and many were
emphatic that they had never spoken to anyone about ads. However, after several different
probing questions most participants started to cautiously recall some occasions when they had
spoken to others.
Those who readily conceded talking about ads with other people were typically very
confident and talkative participants. Ann, who is a very gregarious, open, chatty person with
a wide circle of friends and active social life immediately admitted to talking to other people
about the stories in ads. However, she quickly apologised for engaging in such uninspiring
conversational topics and was teased about it by her friend Belinda. Likewise, Sharon and
Tess both admitted to talking to a range of people about ads but made light of their propensity
for striking up a conversation with anyone.
Well I talk to Steve [husband] or just in general conversation. If I see a really good ad that’s
on, yeah. If I like an ad, if I know someone in the ad. If it’s a product, TiVo, I’ve been talking
to people about TiVo lately ... Sounds like we have boring conversation (Ann).
Yeah. She has a boring old life. All she does is watch TV ads. (laughter) (Belinda)
I have such limited conversation. (laughter) (Ann)
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So you said “Mum,” and you said, what did you say? “People at work? People at school?”
(Researcher)
Yeah. Yeah. (Tess)
You can’t really shut us up! (laughter) (Sharon)
Well we just have verbal diarrhoea! (laughter) (Tess)
The use of brand ads as resources in conversations slowly became apparent as the pair
interviews teased out participant experiences. Nicola, who was always quite guarded in what
she discussed or admitted to, spoke of using a brand advertising phrase in conversation if the
context was right.
I suppose there’d be the odd time I don’t know. Not really anything that comes to mind.
(Nicola)
No. Doesn’t make you rush out and buy anything does it? (Marcia)
No. No. (Nicola)
No, sometimes I’m sort of interested if it was a talking point for whatever reason…
(Researcher)
I suppose when the Tui ads started coming out like the big billboards, when they first came
out that was a bit different ‘cause they were quite funny. (Nicola)
Tui, “Yeah right.” (Marcia)
“Yeah right.” (Researcher)
Yeah. (Nicola)
So, if you were going to talk to somebody about a, like a Tui, “Yeah right,” ad, what, which
sort of people might you talk to about it and which people wouldn’t you because, for
whatever reason really? (Researcher)
I think more so they come up in conversation like when you think somebody’s telling a porky
and you go, “Yeah right.” (Nicola)
She referred to the Tui beer billboard campaign whose formula is a frequently updated topical
short slogan juxtaposed against the phrase “Yeah right,” an expression of doubt or disbelief.
“The effectiveness of the campaign has been in tapping into and exploiting the typical Kiwi
bloke culture, and reinforcing the image (be it real or imagined) of the independent, beer-
guzzling, hard-working Kiwi male who values his mates over his chick, and never shows any
emotion or concern for others.”
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0303/S00244.htm
Similarly, Helen mentioned the use of well-known brand advertising phrases in conversation:
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I missed the ball on the tennis court the other day and fell over and someone said, “Moments
like these” [you need Minties]. (laughter) (Helen)
The Minties brand, whose naming rights are confusingly held by Nestlé in Australia and
Cadbury in New Zealand, has long used the comical depiction of ignominious sporting
moments in advertising, and is considered an iconic Australian brand by Australians, and is
beloved as a New Zealand treasure in this country.
In general, ads provide common reference points and constitute a widely available
conversational resource, as noted by Virginia and Waverley.
[My husband] might have said “You know that ad? Well that’s like the bach that we used to
go to and we’d, like that, we used to do that too.” We’d often use ads as a point of reference
when talking about a story, of recreating a story from our childhood or something because
everyone knows ads. (Virginia)
I do the same. (Waverley)
According to the participants, talking about ads is most likely to occur while actually
watching them. Thus, many conversations are between participants and spouses, children
and/or flatmates and close friends who are in the home environment and sharing in the
viewing activities.
Having the ad on screen at the time of conversation provides a point of reference and makes
it easier to relate to the themes of interest.
I’d have to be watching it to talk about it; otherwise I wouldn’t, like that L&P I’d say, “Oh
shit, we did that as kids.” (Cathy)
Yeah. (Donna)
I’d never wait for the next day and my kids came home from school and I’d say, “I saw an
L&P ad yesterday” [same words echoed by Donna] “and it was what I did as a child,” no.
‘Cause it’s, to them it means nothing and they didn’t visually see it, but if they were all
laughing and saying, “Oh that looks old fashioned,” then I’d say, “Oh well that was us when
we were kids.” (Cathy)
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Lana and her flatmates were once eager fans regularly discussing a New Zealand ad
campaign which “was initially supposed to be a series of ads about dairy products. It turned
into a six-year soap opera that enraged and gripped the country.”
http://idealog.co.nz/magazine/march-april-2006/features/the-last-great-showman In fact,
despite finishing over 15 years ago, the long-running Anchor/Fernleaf family saga (the brand
name was changed during the campaign) was fondly recalled by six of the 10 pairs of
participants in this study.
There were several different motivations for talking about the stories in ads. The most
common ones relate to humour, novelty and controversy—and these do not necessarily have
anything to do with New Zealandness—for example, many of the participants told the
researcher that they had recently been talking about a U by Kotex Beaver tampon ad and
were very keen to talk about it off the record, since the material was considered quite
offensive and at the time was the subject of much media attention.
I suppose I would say, “Oh did you see that funny ad?” (Helen)
Generally talking to their children about advertising was a theme common amongst the
participants. At the most basic level ads provided an opportunity to educate children about
the ways of the world. Public safety messages were top of mind for Lana.
So why would you talk to your husband or kids maybe about ads, the stories in ads? What,
can you think of an example of one that you might have? (Researcher)
I talk to my kids about ads that have a message about safety. (Lana)
Oh you’re a good mum, aren’t you? (Karen)
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I know. Like the fire [NZ Fire Service fire safety campaign] ads or something ‘cause I think,
“Oh shit we haven’t done a fire drill for ages, now let’s talk about how to get out of the
house.” If it was something … (Lana)
You see that’s brilliant Lana that’s … (Karen)
… relative like that. (Lana)
The techniques used in making ads are sometimes a point of discussion between parents and
children.
So what would you say if it was your kids and they, if you were having a discussion, what
would be the nature of the discussion that you’d have with them? (Researcher)
Just, “How do you think they worked out, how do you think they’ve done that?” Like the
latest Gorilla, Cadbury ad has got, they’re playing, they’re doing a song with their eyebrows,
they’re raising their eyebrows up and stuff so it’s all computer generated. (Georgina)
Not so much related to the brand, more just what they were doing on the ad that was…
(Helen)
Waverley and Virginia revealed that their teenage daughters, who are friends, have had
parental discussions and compared notes about ads. In the following example a more critical
media studies approach has been used by the mothers in discussing the influence and social
impact of ads.
Furthermore, sensitive issues (possibly including relationships, puberty and death) could be
introduced (by mother or child) into a discussion as a result of shared ad viewing. Off the
record comments relating to the U by Kotex Beaver tampon ad indicated this, and (on the
record) both Tess and Belinda noted their relief at not having to answer such questions but
were aware of the potential for such parent child discussions.
... you’d take an interest in it, like the beaver ad because it relates to you because you know
your daughter [a teenager] didn’t pick up on that [vulgar terminology]. (Belinda)
... if there was something that had a bit of an adult theme about it and I wanted to give the
kids a kind of bare level thing on it I might say, “Oh yes well,” you know, kind of disguise the
adult theme in something that’s a bit more appropriate for them. (Lana)
The New Zealandness of brand stories in advertising is sometimes a reason for talking with
children about ads. Iconic imagery, particularly scenery, was mentioned by Donna as the
focal point of a conversation with her daughters.
Now you already said the kids ... Did you say you talked about the scenery with them?
(Researcher)
Yeah, like when I saw that Air New Zealand ad for the first time. (Donna)
So what did you say …? (Researcher)
I just said to them that, “Look how beautiful our country is, you know. That’s what our
country looks like out of Auckland.” (Donna)
Brand advertising can provide the script to illustrate strongly held beliefs to a new generation
of New Zealanders—for example, children were told about the much talked about trans-
Tasman rivalry, as illustrated in the Mitre 10 Sandpit ad.
Yeah, yeah, saying they’re gonna build a wall and they ask the Aussie guy and he says, “Oh
you’re dreaming mate,” when they asked if he would come over and help. (Georgina)
Spoke to my kids about that. Oh they were laughing, thought it was hilarious. (Helen)
Yeah? (Researcher)
Yeah, they thought it was really funny. (Helen)
“No surprises there!”(Georgina)
The ad they referred to was “voted Fair Go’s Favourite TV ad for 2009”. The brand’s values
were also strongly aligned with key elements of New Zealand national identity—“Kiwi
values, ingenuity, and give-it-a-go attitude”—and “reinforced that for Kiwis, DIY is in our
DNA.” http://www.draftfcb.co.nz/ourwork/diyisinourdna/
Similarly, Marcia highlighted that she made a point of talking to her children about
Australian ads which exemplified the differences between Australians and New Zealanders.
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A recent trip to Australia with her children had provided much brand advertising material to
feed conversations comparing Australians and New Zealanders.
New Zealandness in brand ads can also be used as a conversation starter with children to
discuss identity and how different other places are to New Zealand. When comparing her
savvy English immigrant parents with Ann’s bewildered South African in-laws, Belinda
noted how ads provided the occasion to tell her children about life in the land of their
ancestors:
No. My mum and dad have been here that long they’ve got it by now. No, I’m the opposite I’d
be probably explaining to my kids what it was like in England. What England is. But then,
yeah. (Belinda)
But would you use the ads, the New Zealand ad as like a point of comparison to say, “Oh
well it wouldn’t be like that in England,” would you? That wouldn’t come up? (Researcher)
Nah, yeah England’s very different. (Belinda)
Yeah, but would you, would the New Zealand ad be the reason you starting and talking
about, saying, “Oh well of course England wouldn’t be anything like that,” or isn’t anything
like that. (Researcher)
Yeah, I guess. (Belinda)
Social memories and the usable past are central to the following text-units where brand
stories provided conversational resources for use in object lessons re-creating the past.
[L&P] I saw that on TV and my daughter was with me and I said, “That was what it was like
when we were kids.” And she just went, (gagging noise made). (Belinda)
So there, you do. You do talk to people. You talk to your kids. (Researcher)
Yeah, I did say, “Oh that’s exactly what it was like when we were kids,” and I said, “Me and
Meredith used to do that,” and I told, she knows Meredith. And I told her and she goes, “Uh.
Oh yeah.” (Belinda)
She looked really bored? (Researcher)
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She looked like I was saying we went to school on a horse and cart basically. Like when we
were kids we used to get all about the war and I used to think, “Oh God, here he goes.” So,
yeah. (Belinda)
So why did you mention it to your daughter? (Researcher)
I think I did say something to her because I just sometimes think that we’re just too PC
nowadays. Everything has to, you know, the kids are just so molly coddled, now they can’t
walk the streets, they can’t, everything. You know, it’s just not the same for safety or, I’m not
saying that there was safety in those days ‘cause we still had people that were a bit peculiar,
if not very peculiar, but you didn’t worry about it like you do now, do you? (Belinda)
Belinda used the L&P ad to illustrate the simple pleasures of a golden age where earlier
generations of New Zealand children were never bored and did not have to worry about
contemporary issues such as sun and swimming pool safety protocols.
But they’d be thinking, “Where’s the lifeguard? Where’s the sun screen? Where’s the
parents?” (Belinda)
“And can I plug my iPod in somewhere?” (Ann)
Yeah. (Belinda)
“And where can I put my [hair] straightener for afterwards?” (Ann)
Yeah. Yeah. “And where’s the shower block ‘cause I don’t want to get chlorine in my hair?”
You know, it’s, they couldn’t relate to that at all, no. (Belinda)
I think we’re just trying to make that generational point that this is how life used to be and
everybody was happy with it, you know? (Ann)
Brand stories were used by the participants in sustaining their shared national identity within
their social network. People within the national in-group were expected to share common
responses to certain brand stories.
Yeah, so can you think of a conversation that, a typical conversation that you might have had
with someone? (Researcher)
“Oh how ridiculous the fact that [Toyota Hilux Bugger], why should that be pulled, ‘cause
that was so Kiwi.” (Pippa)
Complaints about it. (Olivia)
And, you know, just because some little old lady who doesn’t like the word bugger. (Pippa)
Brands advertising stories have the capacity to insult and offend feelings of national identity
and generate shared outrage, as happened in the following conversation. Cadbury Moro had
recently launched a campaign which played on the highly successful Flight of the Conchords
television series where they billed themselves as ‘Formerly New Zealand’s fourth most
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I think I’d more discuss if it was an ad that I didn’t like. If I found it, I don’t know, annoying
or, there’s one particular ad at the moment that is the number four, coming fourth. Moro. It’s
the thing about coming fourth and I think it, is that in relation to the Flight of the Conchords,
the fourth best folk duo, I think it is, so you know, coming fourth in the Melbourne Cup,
coming, you know, not winning the America’s Cup, coming fourth in this and that and then,
yeah it doesn’t matter. (Ingrid)
Putting New Zealand down? Is that what it is? (Researcher)
Yeah. It is really. (Ingrid)
While Moro had apparently been undermining some of the foundational myths about New
Zealand national identity, such as being world beaters and punching above our weight,
especially in the sports arena, other brands such as Spray and Walk Away17 had been
perpetuating racist stereotypes. Conversations spawned by brand ads such as this help sustain
shared views that it is necessary to fit in and not be different (so that national identity is not
17
This Spray and Walk Away ad features a Chinese man with a bad English accent who takes on the persona of
a white coated Japanese professor/scientist demonstrating a product for removing lichen, moss and algae.
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Olivia and Pippa noted that they would be careful who they talked about this mocking ad
with—it is a joke to be shared with the national in-group only.
But I think I’m probably typical Kiwi as far as humour is concerned, I don’t think a lot of
immigrants would necessarily get a lot of the humour in those ads, I think it would get lost on
them. (Pippa)
But you possibly would talk to most people. (Olivia)
But any sort of verging on PC, non-PC ads, like I’m surprised the Chinese community hasn’t
got up in arms about the, “Walk away.” I mean I think that’s just, when that came on I just
split myself laughing, it was so funny. And that’s really taking the mickey out of the Chinese.
(Pippa)
Although conversations about brand stories commonly occur in the home at the time of
viewing, there were other occasions where participants would speak about New Zealandness
as a result of what had been viewed. These opportunities to sustain national identity occurred
while talking to relations and friends but also when talking to those more distantly connected,
such as mere acquaintances or even strangers at the school gate, as is illustrated later in this
chapter.
Have you ever talked about New Zealandness in ads with people outside the home?
(Researcher)
No. (Ingrid)
Brothers and sisters or? (Researcher)
Um. (pause) (Ingrid)
Parents or? (Researcher)
Oh you know, yeah possibly, that Toyota one, you know, that Hilux one because I think my
aunt was saying that she just found that so funny, she just really loved that, loved that ad and
I remembered thinking, “I haven’t seen it,” but then I did see it and I could see what she was
talking about. (Ingrid)
Yeah, there’s some iconic ones like that that we have but... (Jackie)
Yeah. (Ingrid)
But … (Jackie)
It was a sort of farming, you know, it was a sort of farming thing and I didn’t know what she
was talking about when she said that but then once I saw it I got it. (Ingrid)
[After some other matters were discussed the conversation returned to this topic]
So your farming ones you would talk to your older family members who were also in the
farming community ‘cause they’d kind of get, is that what you’re saying? (Researcher)
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Yeah. Yeah that’s right, they would get it and they’d find it funny and they could relate to the
whole sort of, the whole thing. (Ingrid)
Yeah. And if Jackie, say, had been brought up on a New Zealand farm you might possibly
mention it to her but you wouldn’t because she doesn’t, is that what you’re saying?
(Researcher)
No, she’s more likely to mention Minnie Cooper [high fashion shoes and bags]. (laughter)
(Jackie)
A very similar conversation with her farming father was recalled by Karen.
I think the Crump ads we’ve talked about, you know, the Crumpy…
Which brand? (Researcher)
Toyota. I did know that. You know, when they drove we had Scotty and … You know, and I
think I’ve discussed that with, ‘cause I think Dad loved those ads in particular, so. I
remember discussing those and he liked it when Scotty when into town and drove Crumpy
around, you know? (Karen)
So what was it about the New Zealandness that you would have discussed? (Researcher)
The farming, the aspect of the farming, “She’ll be right, hold on,” and the townies coming
out to the farm. (Karen)
Tess used the Australian rivalry themes in the NZI ad to initiate a discussion with her mother.
So when talking to your family and your friends and your work mates, or whatever, have you
ever commented in New Zealandness in ads? (Researcher)
Definitely the NZI ad for me. (Tess)
Mm. (Sharon)
So who would you have spoken to about that? (Researcher)
Oh, husband ... (Tess)
Yip. (Sharon)
Mum, people at school. It just depends. (Tess)
Ok, so when you talk to your mum, she wasn’t sitting in the room when you saw the ad then?
(Researcher)
No. (Tess)
No, so you’ve brought it up? (Researcher)
Yeah, just, “Oh, have you seen that NZI ad? It’s quite humorous, blah blah blah, the
Australians have stolen everything from us.” Dunno. Just everybody can relate to it. Yeah.
(Tess)
New Zealandness in brand advertising became an issue for Karen to discuss and compare
notes with her sister. This all started when Karen’s children were particularly attracted to the
imagery in a Genesis Energy advertisement (although they did not appear to remember the
brand name with any certainty).
Yeah I have with the one, and I don’t even know what the ad was now, I think it was Genesis
Energy or something. And it went with the feather that landed in the, the feather blowing and
the kids always stopped what they were doing and raced to watch it and they, and their
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comments were at the time, “I love this Mum, it’s, I love the way that the feather goes
through and,” it was a pohutukawa, no it was a feather wasn’t it? (Karen)
No there was a feather and a pohutukawa flower. (Lana)
Pohutukawa flower. (Karen)
Yeah. (Lana)
So your kids said, “Oh this is great.” (Researcher)
They loved it, they loved the music and I thought it was very Kiwi and I did comment on it to
my sister I think, I’ve said, “Do your kids stop what they’re doing and watch that ad?” And
she had, I think she said they did watch it when it came on, yeah. (Karen)
The ad they loved had haunting original music which accompanied the passage of a Southern
Rata flower on a long water-borne journey through the pristine New Zealand natural
environment, highlighting the renewable resource of water used by Genesis Energy in the
generation of electricity.
Some of the participants also spoke of using brand ads in conversations with outsiders—
overseas guests and recent immigrants—in a process of acculturation.
See, you know when that, I was telling you about that church thing? I’m going to this church
thing and they had an introduction and out of about a hundred and sixty people, hundred and
fifty-two were South Africans. (Ann)
Hardly any Kiwis there! (Belinda)
Oh wow. (laughter) (Researcher)
So, and in my little group, there were probably twelve of us and it was all like “Who are
you?” “How long have you been here?” “Where are you from?” I was the last one to speak
and I said, “Well I’m a Kiwi and I’ve been here all my life and I like pavlova and I love
rugby and I like,” that was what I said, you know, because, and I would, probably thought of
that ad [NZI, Stealing your stuff] when I was drawing on all the things that make me a Kiwi.
(Ann)
Do you ever talk to people at work or in the lunch room, morning tea or anything like, about
ads? (Researcher)
The only time I’ve ever talked to people about ads is if we’ve had overseas visitors here and
they’ve sort of, you’re interested when you go to other countries in what kind of their ads are.
(Elaine)
And we’ve talked about them with our exchange student, I guess. When she’s been sitting
down with us, watching TV, and she looks kind of blankly, or doesn’t quite kind of get it.
What it is that, I mean she loves all the ones with the out, the outdoors ones, the Air New
Zealand type ones and the, any, anything with sheep and water but just talking about that, the
essence of what they are, but if we didn’t have her in the house we’d all just be enjoying it,
but yeah without, yeah, well yeah, because it does need explaining. (Fiona)
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Brand ads provide the resources to use directly or indirectly in conversations with those
clearly not (yet) part of the insider national community group. These stories provide material
which can be used to illustrate key aspects of national identity—the myths, values, practices,
places and icons held most dear.
So what sort of people would they be? About NZI stealing your stuff? (Researcher)
I mean if it came up, or if you know, I don’t think there’d be anyone I wouldn’t talk to about
that ad. I mean if you’re in a group of people, of parents waiting it wouldn’t be the sort of ad
that it’s like ‘I won’t bring that up because of that person’, you know? It’s just a general,
yeah, anybody type ad. (Sharon)
I’m just wondering if you had perhaps immigrant families or something, if you’d say ‘oh
well’ ... (Researcher)
No, I’d love to talk to Australian people about it and just go, “You guys. You do steal lots of
shit.” (laughter) And see whether or not they find it quite so humorous as we do. (Tess)
Okay, so you’d actually use it to ... (Researcher)
Absolutely. Shit yeah. I mean they razz us enough about things and how little we are and ...
(Tess)
Insignificant. (Sharon)
Yeah, because we are so insignificant that you steal a lot of our ideas. (Tess)
Cool stuff. (Sharon)
Yeah. (Tess)
Right. (Researcher)
Definitely. (Tess)
Yeah, for sure. Yeah, so it wouldn’t be a, it wouldn’t put you off it would make you say it
more? (Sharon)
Yeah, to Australians. (Tess)
Yep. (Sharon)
Yeah. Hell yeah. (Tess)
During discussions, participants identified people with whom they would not initiate a
conversation about a brand ad because they were perceived as not competent to appreciate the
New Zealandness inherent in the story.
[My husband and I] talk all the time how just other people wouldn’t get it, those ads, how the
Americans and stuff how they wouldn’t get it. And the Vogel’s bread thing with the thing and
how they wouldn’t, other people wouldn’t just get it, they just don’t get it, our humour and
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surprisingly The Flight of the Conchords seems to be re-educating them all. But, yeah how
the humour, how we find it amusing. Like we usually go, “Americans wouldn’t get that ad
would they?” kind of thing, so we’ve had the comments, just ‘cause you were saying about
the humour. But how they’ve packaged it, we’ve often talked about how, “Gee that’s rounded
up, that’s packaged New Zealanders, that’s pretty much got us all summed up.” (Virginia)
I mean, and to other nationalities, probably it would put me off because it’d just be all too
hard to explain it. I’d be like, “Uh, can’t be bothered.” (Sharon)
So you wouldn’t? (Researcher)
It’s not that I wouldn’t talk about it, it’s just, probably more ... (Sharon)
They wouldn’t understand. (Tess)
They wouldn’t get it? (Researcher)
They don’t really get it like we do. Or Australians, you know, I mean it’s sort of really a, yeah
I don’t know. But then they do, but. (Tess)
The Australians at least they would know what you are talking about with all the contexts,
whereas someone from South Africa wouldn’t even, wouldn’t get it at all. (Sharon)
No, probably not. (Tess)
So you wouldn’t even mention, say if it was a brand new L&P ad that was really cool, you
might talk to all the other parents but if there was, if you’re just standing with a South
African parent you would think, “Oh God, I’m not gonna mention this.” (Researcher)
No, no. So many other things you could talk about. As in that would be mutual. (Sharon)
Right. (Researcher)
Well, yeah, I don’t know. (Sharon)
I dunno, it would really depend on the person and how long they’ve been in the country and
that sort of stuff, because they’d then be starting to be a bit familiar with all things kiwiana.
(Tess)
I suppose. (Sharon)
So you kind of judge? (Researcher)
Yeah, I’d say. (Tess)
Mm. (Sharon)
Depending on whether you thought that they would have a shared, whether they’d sort of
know what it was about? (Researcher)
Yeah. (Tess)
My husband has a Bugger Me tie, so it’s got, “Bugger me,” written on it ten thousand times.
We don’t wear it out of New Zealand. You know, it just wouldn’t be taken well. But in New
Zealand, not a problem. (Olivia)
Olivia’s suggestion is that within the national community wearing a ‘bugger me’ tie is a
knowing way of performing New Zealand identity. Outside of that society the symbolic value
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would be quite different and the tie would potentially be offensive if the brand ad context was
not known.
This chapter has detailed the findings of fieldwork conducted during the study. The reader
has been provided with in-depth contextual material regarding participants and their
autobiographically derived views on New Zealand national identity, brand advertisements
used in the study and expert panel and participant analyses of those communications with
respect to national identity. The research question, ‘How do consumers experience national
identity in brand communications?’ has been addressed in several linked ways. The findings
are reported, firstly, in terms of how New Zealandness is successfully operationalised in the
brand ads used in the study and, secondly, in terms of brands nominated by participants
during the study. Brands that were considered to contribute to New Zealandness have been
analysed with respect to both consumption of brand ads and reported usage and purchase of
the branded products/services. The second research question, ‘What are the social processes
affecting national identity through brand experiences?’ has been addressed through reports of
shared social and conversational experiences of ad consumption, intergenerational transfer of
national identity and other types of social activities where national identity is sustained and
maintained using brand ads as resources.
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5 Chapter Five
DISCUSSION
5.1 Overview
The purpose of chapter five is to discuss the relevance, significance and importance of the
findings in this exploratory study. In addition, this chapter advances new theory that extends
understanding of brands as they affect national identity. Firstly, the focus is on discussing the
key findings with reference to corroborating literature and explicating both theoretically
expected and the unexpected aspects of the study’s findings. Also, since this thesis has
utilised a strategy of “poach[ing] and cross-fertiliz[ing] ideas, methods, and contexts from a
variety of theoretical conversations that differentially address core topics” (Arnould and
Thompson 2005, p.869), another important task of this chapter is to draw threads together
and provide the reader with commentary on the findings in the context of marketing and
consumer research literature, and with reference to other branches of social science. The
chapter is organised so that the main areas of enquiry, delineated by the research questions,
are addressed first, before more overarching theoretical issues are discussed.
The discussion that follows in this chapter shows in many ways that the findings provide
strong support for Stern’s (1991b) conceptualisation of brands as narratives. Brand stories,
offered to consumers through marcoms, provided the resources and pre-structures for
participants to freely use to create shared meanings as suggested by Arvidsson (2005).
Although the advertising literature clearly posits that culture is made visible through
marcoms, the findings from this research demonstrate that imagery and narratives of national
identity are provided by brand resources. National identity is experienced as a result of
consuming brand marcoms in the manner theorised by Elliott and Wattanasuwan (1998), that
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is, they are used as symbolic resources for the construction of identity. Consumers reported
experiencing national identity through parts or the whole of a brand story.
The following discussion of the findings is organised around the five part framework of
national identity categorisation, introduced in chapter three. This is followed by an analysis
of the value of the national identity categorisation framework and a summary of the insights
relating to research question one. Overall, the findings regarding experiences of national
identity in brand marcoms are confirmatory. As the discussion shows, the aspects of New
Zealand national identity reported in other disciplines are present and recognised by
consumers in brand marcoms.
There are many myths of national identity relating to New Zealand according to social
sciences literatures. Mythic foundational stories underpin all aspects of national identity and
were readily apparent in the narratives offered by participants—the reader is referred back to
the findings in Table 7 where the most commonly mentioned national identity themes are
listed. Clearly, these themes are the same ones reported in the literature review regarding
New Zealand myths (section 3.3.2.1). Many of the most commonly mentioned mythic themes
are discussed in the four sections that follow (as they relate especially to practices,
characteristics, places and symbols). Thus, at this point, myths revealed in the
autobiographical sessions which did not fit into the latter categories are discussed, for
example, rivalry with Australia, punching above our weight, tall poppy/fitting in, two degrees
of separation, needing external validation and golden age.
During the pair interviews it was established that these types of foundational myths were
easily recognised in the TVCs shown to participants. Some of the most frequently mentioned
myths were highlighted by brands such as Kiwibank It’s ours (underdog, rivalry with
Australia), Steinlager Pure Keep it pure (world leaders punching above our weight), L&P
Bombs (golden age childhood) and NZI Stealing your stuff (‘number eight’ ingenuity and
enterprise). The myths were embedded in the brand stories, not as minor elements, but central
to the narratives and instantly recognisable, according to participants. Brand marcoms
enabled the participants to re-experience familiar myths of national identity. The collective
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aspect of the myths was evident in the manner of speaking about the TVCs; participants used
inclusive we/us language (we can hack it with you; we don’t take ourselves too seriously; we
punch above our weight; we’ll help you out; they are our values; we put sports people on a
pedestal). The findings provide clear evidence that brands, through their marcoms, do
articulate the myths of national identity, and that consumers of brand marcoms experience
national identity through the brand narratives.
According to the cultural studies literature, the collective practices, societal values and social
rituals that underpin New Zealand national identity include things such as DIY, giving a
hand, informality, doing OE and socialising outdoors. As expected, these types of practices
formed an important part of the autobiographical narratives provided by the research
participants. The narratives of participants’ own typically New Zealand life experiences were
dominated by incidents that revealed social activities and rituals. The most commonly
mentioned themes of national identity, that relate to community behaviours, included
OE/interest in the world, informality, family values, community volunteering and
neighbourliness, outdoor life/BBQ, being rugby mad, and living and mixing with all types in
society where inherited social status is not important.
The collective practices dimension of national identity was clearly evident in the selected
television advertisements according to the participants. Brand stories that exemplified such
practices included Mitre 10 Mega Parking Lessons (DIY and mixing with people from all
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walks of life), Bell Tea Generations (informal beach family gatherings, chilling out together),
Vogel’s Homesick Kiwi (young Kiwis travelling abroad, interested in the rest of the world)
and Wattie’s Footie (families and kids football, volunteering to coach and manage sports
teams). Furthermore, these societal elements of national identity were singled out as being
central to top of mind nominations of some brands with respect to New Zealandness. Brands
named in this exercise included ANZ bank (helping outsiders, doing the right thing), Adidas
(rugby madness) and Fernleaf/Anchor (family values). In summary, this study showed that
brand marcoms provide opportunities for participants to experience the community practices
and rituals characteristic of New Zealand national identity. Other aspects of ritualised brand
consumption, not directly linked to the analysis of brand marcoms, are discussed later in
section 5.5.
Recapping the literature review, nationally distinctive personal defining attributes and
characteristics have been catalogued in the New Zealand context. The participants’
autobiographical narratives clearly enunciated the sorts of traits previously documented in the
literature. The relevant key themes of national identity mentioned by over 75% of participants
included active/sports orientated, friendly/helpful/decent, ingenious/creative, hard
working/mentally tough, sense of humour/irreverent, can do attitude and humble. Many of
these themes were recognised in some of the 19 brand advertisements used in the study.
The findings suggest that the manner in which the personal psychological characteristics of
national identity are operationalised in brand marcoms varies. In some cases there is an
invisible narrator of the brand story. This narrator may exemplify nationally defining
attributes, as the participants noted in the case of the Kiwibank It’s ours campaign. In that
type of scenario the brand directly takes on the personal characteristics central to national
identity. Characters portrayed in a brand narrative may embody the defining personal
qualities, as in the findings relating to the old man telling his story in Mainland Cheese Four
seasons advertisement. The dimensions of honesty, hard work and reserve also represent the
Mainland brand’s personality and epitomise personal attributes of New Zealand identity at
the same time.
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Many celebrity endorsers mentioned in the study were New Zealanders promoting brands
with strong local history. However, in a notable break from this trend, Adidas was nominated,
not once but, several times as making participants feel the way they do about New
Zealandness. The All Black rugby team sponsorship has clearly been the most important
factor driving this association. Nevertheless, it is perhaps surprising to see an obviously
‘foreign’ brand that is so closely bound up with sense of national identity. Furthermore, in
New Zealand, Adidas has run a variety of marcoms campaigns in recent years, some of which
have nothing to do with rugby. The ongoing Adidas brand story is seen as closely aligned
with the narratives of New Zealand people and their distinct personal defining characteristics.
In summary, psychological characteristics of New Zealand national identity are experienced
in Adidas brand marcoms.
Overall, in this study, the constellations of meaning and symbolic associations of endorsers
have been shown to contribute to national identity in ways not previously explicated in the
literature. Furthermore, the findings have demonstrated that the way that the brand is
narrated, both in tone and manner, impacts on how national identity is experienced in
marcoms. The findings extend understanding of the role of narrators in brand marcoms and
contribute to this underexplored aspect of the literature.
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The New Zealand cultural studies literature claims that there is an implicit link between
nature and national identity. Furthermore, there is a strong connection between places and
experiences—memories are grounded in the landscape. These aspects of national identity
were borne out in the findings where at least 80% of the participants included holiday escapes
to the wild, the importance of the beach, discovering the country, and 100% Pure, green
paradise themes in their autobiographical narratives. As reported in the findings, many of
these themes were subsequently recognised by most participants in particular researcher-
provided television brand ads.
Attachment to the sorts of places incorporated in brand marcoms was shown to be a uniting
factor amongst those who claimed New Zealand national identity. The women in this study
acknowledged powerful scenery, recognisable places and representations of the natural
world. More importantly, the imagery and the narratives often activated their memories of
visiting places and their collective sense of belonging to the New Zealand represented by the
brands. Analysis of the participant responses to brand ads also made it clear that recognition
and attachment to such places was widely shared by the cross-section of women, and not
limited according to personal circumstances.
In another part of the study, the findings showed that place based narratives, iconic locations
and distinctive landscapes were sometimes the most important factors in prompting
participants to name certain brands as making them feel the way that they did about New
Zealandness. The cases quoted by participants included the powerful narratives of the
Icebreaker brand—for example, the raw and natural world (versus synthetic), authenticity,
purity and being close to nature—accompanied by spectacular panoramic alpine scenery.
Such narratives, consumed in a variety of brand marcoms, offer alternative ways to
experience New Zealand national identity. Thus, the findings illustrate the way brands
reproduce existing place-based narratives of national identity and act as resources for the
construction/reproduction of national identity.
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According to the literature, national identity is flagged in everyday symbols and cultural
products. In the New Zealand context, this includes the icons that are classified as kiwiana,
and Kiwi music, speech and language. By definition, kiwiana is a collection of the most
universally acknowledged iconic symbols of culture that sets New Zealand apart from other
places. Therefore, the expectation in this study was that kiwiana would be top of mind when
discussing symbols in connection with New Zealand national identity. Not surprisingly, the
findings of the study confirmed this. The themes that were in evidence in the participants’
autobiographical narratives included shared recognition of Maori symbols and kiwiana icons.
These were mentioned by the women as being relevant to understanding New Zealand
national identity. That is, Maori symbols and kiwiana constituted insider information about
things that only a New Zealander would know the significance of. In the pair interview
sessions a variety of kiwiana symbols were recognised by the participants in the researcher-
provided television brand ads. Furthermore, participants noted the inclusion of local music
(including several instances of the national anthem), Kiwi vernacular and characteristic ways
of speaking within the brands’ television ads.
The findings of the study not only verify that national identity is experienced through popular
symbols in brand marcoms as anticipated. They also suggest that consumers feel connected to
the nation as a result of consuming these symbols in brand marcoms—and especially in
conjunction with Kiwi music. The feelings of instant recognition and familiarity with local
music (including the artists and the lyrics) help confirm in-group status and strengthen New
Zealand national identity. In summary, because the codes and meanings associated with
popular symbols are mostly only known to those who share national identity, then
incorporation into brand marcoms draws the insider group together in ways that are not
possible otherwise.
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As the discussion above indicates, brand TVCs were shown to be assemblages of value to co-
creative consumers, in the manner conceptualised in CCT. Certainly, the findings support the
view that the marketplace is a reservoir of mythic and symbolic resources for use in
consumer identity projects (Arnould and Thompson 2005). Furthermore, the findings
reinforce the view that consumers of brand resources are bricoleurs—that is to say, in
constructing stories and identities they pick and choose, drawing on a wide range of things
that happen to be available (Lévi-Strauss 1962). Various aspects of brand narratives and
imagery resonate more or less with individual consumers depending on influences in the
social and individual realm, and dependent on the consumer’s unique life experiences and
plans as illustrated in the findings (Mick and Buhl 1992). Overall, in the New Zealand
context, consumers experienced national identity through parts or the whole of a brand story,
through nostalgia, place imagery, Kiwi music, national myths, value and practices and local
celebrity endorsers. The narratives and imagery not only referenced local culture, they
engendered national identity and feelings of belonging. Furthermore, the co-created meanings
from brand narratives are incorporated in consumer lives and used for purposes unrelated to
the advertised product or service.
As discussed in the literature review, the role of brands has been broadly categorised as
having functional, symbolic and psychological dimensions. Certainly, the concepts of brands
as identifiers, knowledge, relationship partners, promises, and dynamic and social processes
have also been highlighted (Merz et al. 2009). However, the findings of this study support a
growing call from scholars, such as Buchanan-Oliver et al. (2008), for the consideration of
brands as experiential entities to account for consumer brand socialisation and experiential
potential. This aspect of brand has been defined by others—see for example de Chernatony
(2002, p.116) who characterises a brand as “a cluster of functional and emotional values,
which promises a particular experience.” More recently, Tynan et al. (2010) have provided
evidence from a study of luxury brand consumers, that personalised brand experiences are
defined by the consumer not by the good itself or the company (which also supports the S-DL
idea of co-creative dimensions to brand experience). The evidence from this study of brands
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and national identity shows that brand marcoms function as a script for consumer experience,
particularly in this case, for experiences of national identity. Future research is needed to
more fully account for consumer brand socialisation and the experiential potential of brands.
The five part categorisation of national identity derived from the literature proved to be a
useful framework for this study. Firstly, it provided an organising structure for evaluating the
richness of brand advertisements for potential inclusion in fieldwork. It also offered a focal
point for discussions with the expert panel of cultural and advertising researchers regarding
how they experienced national identity in brand marcoms. Secondly, preparation of the
categorisation sensitised the researcher to the key themes of New Zealand national identity
reported in the cultural studies literature. This helped the researcher guide participants (if they
needed direction in their autobiographical narratives) and assisted in the development of the
pair interview guide.
Coding and analysis of key themes of national identity arising from the autobiographical
narratives did not use a pre-specified coding framework—the multiple distinct themes were
derived directly from the narratives. However, once the key themes were established they
were evaluated with respect to the framework. All themes fitted easily within the framework,
confirming its value in the study. Overall, the categories of myths; collective values and
rituals; psychological characteristics and national stereotypes; attachment to place; and
popular symbols has provided a system for comprehensively answering the first research
question, How do consumers experience national identity in brand communications?
National identity is experienced by consumers via imagery and narratives of national identity
provided by brand communications. Brand marcoms can incorporate all aspects of national
identity identified in the social sciences literature, that is, myths; collective values and rituals;
psychological characteristics and national stereotypes; attachment to place; and popular
symbols. Selected brand TVCs were evaluated as being rich in New Zealand national identity
themes by an expert panel. Individual research participants provided rich autobiographical
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narratives that revealed aspects of national identity. Finally, friendship pairs of participants
recognised their own themes of national identity in the pre-selected brand TVCs. The
imagery and brand stories combined to supply the brand marcoms consumers with resources
that they clearly used to discursively re/produce national identity. Further support for these
findings came from the analysis of nominated brands—that is, brands and their marcoms not
specified or prompted by the researcher but listed by participants in a top of mind exercise.
Narratives and imagery provided by the brands recalled in the interviews also provided the
means for experiencing national identity in brand communications.
Four different social processes, where consumers utilised brand resources to affect national
identity, were evident in the findings. As indicated in the literature, communicative
behaviours and interaction rituals underpinned by language are used to construct and create
social interaction. While these processes have been widely documented in the theoretical
domains of sociology and social psychology, evidence of these mechanisms in national
identity projects is almost unreported, and certainly has not been demonstrated in conjunction
with consumers’ use of brand resources (or in the marketing literature). Discussion relating to
each of these social processes is provided next. Following that is an analysis of the linking
value within national communities as implied by these social processes and a summary of the
insights relating to research question two.
A review of the literature in chapter two indicated that national identity is reproduced,
negotiated and transformed discursively when conversations with fellow national community
members become identificatory performances. In addition, there is broad agreement that
national cinema, public artworks and commemorative activities, media discourse and
television programming contribute useful narratives to national communities. The findings of
this study show that brand marcoms are also contributors of narratives used in what might be
designated as ‘national identificatory conversational performances’. Evidence from the study
demonstrates the bonding processes in action during mundane conversations, where
participants discussed, recounted, reminisced and reminded each other of special places,
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shared experiences, values and characteristics that they had previously rated as central to
national identity. Such conversations were instigated as a direct result of consuming brand
narratives, often experienced in the form of television commercials.
The discursive strategies used by participants in reproducing national identity included the
tactics elaborated in the literature review—use of clichés, prefacing statements with
disclaimers and denials of intolerance, evasion, mitigation, jokes, irony and euphemism.
These approaches were used to help sustain shared views and to reinforce the collective view
of us/we. The study also illustrated that such shared views related to brand narratives that
supported both positive/acceptable facets of national identity and those which were perceived
as being negative/unacceptable. During interviews participants spontaneously raised the topic
of specific brand narratives that were offensive to their views of national identity. While they
agreed with each other on the negative matters they were also unanimous in their opinions
about attractive dimensions. Such discussions served to emphasise solidarity, the necessity of
fitting in and not being different.
The findings indicate that discursive reproduction and negotiation of national identity via
brands occurs in various social contexts, most commonly at home with family and friends.
The immediacy of television advertising allows for spur of the moment conversations where
brand narratives provide a common point of reference and focus for joint
reproduction/negotiation of national identity. Brand narratives cue private reflections on
national identity, and allow for reinterpretation and revisioning of the past and the present.
Another aspect of the discursive reproduction of national identity through brands that was
evident in the study is the re/creation of social memories. As the literature suggests, people
utilise external resources and other people to shape their recollections. Brands provide
resources that are sometimes rich in mythic and nostalgic content and thus, have a role to
play in re/creating social memories. However, the study illustrated that the role played by
brands is greater than merely providing the wherewithal for shaping personal recollections for
the solitary consumer. Conversations resulting from brand narrative consumption also foster
the re/creation of social memories. Collaborative memory making implies a bonding effect as
a result of making mutual connections with each other and in sharing responses to supplied
narratives. The findings of this study suggest that feelings of national identity are apparently
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The study also shows that brand narratives have national identity uses beyond the domestic
television viewing context. Participants revealed instances of brand narratives providing the
focal point for conversations within their wider social network, when talking to people who
they were confident were within their national in-group. Such people were reportedly from a
variety of social domains ranging from relations, close friends and associates, to clients, mere
acquaintances and fleetingly encountered strangers. (Conversely, the participants noted that
foreigners, who might also be from the same social domains, would not be included in such
national community affirmation conversations since they were judged as out-group
members). The study participants expected to share common views central to national
identity when referring to brand narratives, whether or not their conversational partners were
familiar with the specifics of the brand story. In summary, brand narratives have been shown
to be used to promote feelings of national unity and shared expression of a particular national
identity at the time of mediated brand consumption and at some later time(s). The findings of
this study advance theory by showing the discursive processes that permit community linking
and development of feelings of belonging and sharing national identity.
The specific social processes by which successive generations of children acquire national
identity are not well explicated in the literature. In summary, daily parent-child interactions
(and particular activities such as watching television programmes and reading stories
together) are believed to be important, but the nature of the interactions and motivating
factors are only vaguely hinted at. The findings of this research show that parents (or more
specifically, the mothers in this study) use the occasion of shared television watching to
transfer their own feelings of national identity on to their children. In particular, the
participants used the narratives in brand marcoms to provide exemplars of national identity.
When consuming television advertising together, the mothers used brand narratives as a point
of reference and focus for discussions highlighting their own feelings of national identity.
The evidence suggests that parents use these brand stories as the basis for further
conversations and commentary on national identity. In the study the participants particularly
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stressed their agenda of passing on perceived differences between New Zealand national
identity and neighbouring Australia (the most salient out-group nation).
The literature review showed mass media and advertising are theoretically important in
acculturation of immigrants and refugees. Acquisition of new national identities is facilitated
by direct consumption of these materials, and through contact and interactions between
newcomers and locals. This study addresses the latter issue (since the design of the study
precluded participation by recent immigrants).
The findings from the study showed two linked but different social processes of acculturation
facilitated by brand resources. Firstly, joint consumption of brand marcoms, particularly
television advertising, facilitates conversations between locals and newcomers. Although
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such occasions might not be particularly frequent, the context of co-consuming brand
narratives, with the common point of reference on screen, allows for the outsider to be
provided with explanatory commentary. Rather than consuming alone, and trying to make
sense of unfamiliar and partially inaccessible narratives that relate to national identity, such
circumstances allow for national community members of the in-group to render assistance
and interpretations to others. The findings showed that direct interaction and conversation
were used to demystify specific aspects of national identity that would otherwise be obscure
or confusing. In this situation, the process of acculturation encompasses the provision of
contextualised help in response to brand narratives.
The boundaries of national identity are brought into focus during interactions with those
whose identity is different, as noted in the literature review. Findings from the study illustrate
that brand narratives facilitate the social processes that constitute boundary work. Participants
noted how they would use particular types of brand narratives as the starting point for
friendly verbal bantering with those who they knew held different national identities. They
described what they would say in an encounter when baiting and mocking out-group people
(the participants specifically mentioned Australians). Previously consumed advertisements
acted as a conversational resource, and again, brand narratives were shown to function as a
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script. The brand story provided an externally fabricated agenda that supported
conversational boundary work related to national identity.
The provision of brand narratives pertinent to national identity also allowed for a slightly
different type of boundary work to occur. Findings from the study suggest that the process of
deciding whether or not a person was considered to be part of the in-group sometimes
depended on predicted responses to brand narratives. That is, participants reported using
brand narratives as a sort of divining tool. When encountering another person they would
weigh-up how well their particular brand narrative inspired commentary would be received
and appreciated. The content of the brand narrative would be an on-the-spot litmus test that
the local would play out in her mind. Under these circumstances, the perceived boundaries of
national identity would be examined and proven as a result of brand narratives. The decision
to (or not to) initiate discursive reproduction of national identity with those persons with
uncertain national identity could be clarified with reference to brand narratives. Once again,
the process of boundary maintenance has been shown to be affected by brands.
The preceding discussions have highlighted a number of social processes, illustrating that the
roles brands play in the lives of consumers are far more extensive than those expressed in
Fournier’s (1998) consumer brand relationships. In all of the four different social processes
discussed above, it is clear to see that brand marcoms have national identity value to
consumers beyond mere ‘use value’. The findings of this research certainly provides evidence
to support Elliott and Wattanasuwan’s (1998) proposition that consumers use brands as
symbolic resources for the construction and maintenance of identity. Likewise, the findings
provide support for CCT in the sense that consumers were shown to work with marketer-
generated materials to re-produce a sense of self (Arnould and Thompson 2005). However,
the findings of this study clearly show that brands have value beyond use as symbolic
resources.
Brand experiences permit and support social connections, as conceptualised by Cova (1997).
That is to say, consumers not only have relationships with brands, consumption of brands
actually impacts on relationships with other people. This is amply illustrated in the previous
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The social connections identified in this study also constitute the ‘brandtalk’ between
members of a community conceptualised by Muñiz and O’Guinn (2005). The methods used
in this study, of how brands affect national identity, have made it possible to capture talk
between consumers facilitated by brands. The findings showed that consumer conversations
build on narratives and images supplied by brand marketers. Communally co-created brand
inspired stories are used by consumers for their own contextually relevant reasons. This study
extends understanding of brands to show that the links between individuals, that constitute a
feeling of collective identity, are activated by the consumption of brand marcoms. Brands
facilitate social connections unrelated to consumption. Brands facilitate national identity.
Brands are socially constructed marketplace phenomena. This study shows that brand linking
value from marketplace based interactions is co-constructed before, during and after
consumption. Both lived experiences and mediated experiences of brands contribute to the
co-creation of brand linking value. Thus, the social processes illustrated in this study also
provide support for newer conceptualisations of the marketplace, particularly regarding how
consumers and marketers constitute and navigate culture in the marketplace. Peñaloza and
Venkatesh (2006) called for markets to be conceptualised as social constructions, where
value is co-created by both marketers and consumers who have agency and act as social
beings rather than as isolated individuals. The findings of this study support their view of the
market as a social construction, existing not as exchanges of capital, people, products and
services, but as enacted processes, partially constituted through consumer activities and
discourses (Peñaloza and Venkatesh 2006). The national identity social processes detailed
earlier—discursive reproduction, intergenerational transfer, acculturation and boundary
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work—are some of the enacted processes that account for the co-creation of brand value in
the marketplace.
National identity is affected through brand experiences by four different social processes
identified in this study. Bonding processes were evident when national identity was
reproduced, negotiated and transformed discursively in conversations with fellow national
community members. Secondly, in this study, the social processes of intergenerational
national identity transfer, between parents and children, perpetuated and reinforced national
identity. Thirdly, acculturation processes were facilitated by brand narratives which operated
as conversational resources of national identity. Finally, the social processes that constitute
boundary work were supported by brand narratives. These brand stories provided an
externally fabricated agenda that supported conversational boundary work related to national
identity. The findings from the study provide compelling evidence that brand experiences
affect national identity at an interpersonal, social level through the processes identified above.
Brands not only act as resources for the self. Through various social processes brands affect
the collective self, that is, brands affect national identity.
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understood in such things as the narratives, iconography and recurring motifs of popular
culture. However, the findings of this study suggest that brand marcoms operate in the same
manner. Furthermore, brand marcoms (particularly television commercials), are a much more
ubiquitous resource for the construction of national identity than cinema. Thus, brand
television commercials potentially play a more potent role in national identity than national
cinema. Developments in marcoms media and the increasing impact and accessibility of
YouTube and the growth of user generated repositories of digital brand marcoms suggests
that brand narratives will continue to be more powerful than national cinema in affecting
national identity.
The findings that brands affect national identity have implications for those responsible for
creating marcoms. A variety of individuals play a part in developing brand stories, from
brand strategists, creators of art and copy concepts, film directors, location and talent scouts,
and those in production and post-production houses. (Furthermore, as Holt (2004) notes,
there are other brand authors—the culture industries, critics and retail salespeople, and
customers, especially those in brand communities). Responsibility for brand stories is
distributed amongst all these people, and by association, they are implicated in nation
building even though they are not necessarily conscious of this role. The findings of this
study point to opportunities for brands to coordinate and actively manage their brands’ stories
with respect to national identity.
Within the field of cultural studies, the finding that ‘everyday’ brands have been shown to be
contributing to national identity is new. Discussion of brands in the New Zealand context of
national identity has been limited to consideration of the local impact of the ‘100% Pure New
Zealand” tourism campaign, which is primarily targeted at foreigners. Critical studies relating
to national identity highlight unease that business interests and economic imperatives are
playing a powerful role in shaping national identity, rather than the national community itself
providing an agenda for debate and negotiation (Beatty and Lawn 2003, 2005; Lawn and
Beatty 2006). The findings of this study add to Beatty and Lawn’s concerns. With that in
mind, this study also has implications for governments and policy makers as they look toward
nation building exercises. The findings of this research suggest that, in the absence of any
more compelling or official input, brands may provide the de facto agenda for developing
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national identity. Even more significantly, brands may be reconceptualised as active agents of
national identity.
There was a temporal dimension to national identity as it was performed and understood by
the participants in this research. The way that national identity was discussed by the
participants in this study was framed by a sense of time. Narratives of national identity
belonged to the participants’ generation. Age related differences in the content of
autobiographical narratives were especially noticeable when comparing the experiences of
the oldest to the youngest participants. In addition, there were a number of references made
by participants to other generations as being different. The participants stressed that what
they were telling the researcher about was specific to people like them who had experienced
similar things. The twists and turns of their stories were predicated on their understanding of
the world and the experiences that had shaped their generation. This finding is entirely
confirmatory; as the literature review noted, the stories in circulation that are important at key
times in one’s life colour the way that identity is performed.
Participants specifically mentioned that their children and, to a lesser extent, their parents and
grandparents, did not exactly share their view of New Zealand national identity. The
influences on those generations were reportedly different—for example, British literature and
culture dominated the formative years of the participants (and all the generations of New
Zealanders before them). In contrast, the teenage children of the participants were raised on a
strong diet of American popular culture and exposed to a range of school text books and
literature with local origins, having a Maori and Pasifika flavour. Thus, the participants
discussed intergenerational differences in attitudes towards, and acceptance of, Maori
language and culture, impacting on sense of national identity. Likewise, the reported impact
of ‘women’s lib’ on the cohort of participants meant that the nature of their life experiences
was very different from their mothers’ and the generations of women before them. This also
coloured their sense of New Zealand national identity. These findings are consistent with the
anthropology literature on life history narratives, which proposes that the life stories of
different generations are underpinned by the social and historical context of their lives.
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The influence of the socio-cultural milieu on generational national identity is not limited to
key events. Evidently, different brands have prominence in an era. While some participants
mentioned things such as Lange at the Oxford Union Debate18, the sinking of the Rainbow
Warrior, family migration stories, the impact of World War Two and the Vietnam War on
their family, and their own pilgrimages to Gallipoli, it was clear that sense of New
Zealandness also came from common patterns of consumption. Phrases such as “everyone
used to ...” were used time and again by participants to refer to unifying experiences. These
comments frequently referred to eating/drinking particular branded foodstuffs (for example,
Tip Top, Wattie’s and Lion Red), but also related to clothing and other items (for example,
Edmond’s cookbook, Swanndri, Macpac and Red bands). This finding suggests that the
brands directly consumed by a generation affect national identity. Shared familiarity with
such brand consumption experiences constituted insider knowledge that those with the same
national identity had in common.
The findings of this study confirm that the construct of national identity necessarily refers to
the past. As both the literature review and the discussion above outlines, narratives of identity
inevitably draw on past experiences as a meaningful life story is crafted from the events that
have shaped the self so far. Different generations recall their own influential movements,
seminal events and favoured practices. Thus, there are some interesting implications for
brands with respect to the use of nostalgia in brand marcoms, as discussed later in this
chapter in section 5.7. However, before that, the discussion turns to a further analysis of
actual brand consumption and some rituals that surround brand consumption in New Zealand.
One aspect of community practice revealed in the research was the ritual surrounding brand
consumption. Very particular rituals that function as common practices for the nation were
described for many brands, especially food and drink brands. These consumption rituals can
be categorised in several ways. Firstly, participants described the importance of providing
18
In a witty and eloquent debate at the Oxford Union, Prime Minister David Lange argued that nuclear weapons
are morally indefensible, stating that “the position of my country is a genuine long-term affirmation of this
proposition”. Lange’s lasting legacy is New Zealand's Nuclear Free Legislation, which for many symbolised a
moral, independent, powerful identity for New Zealand.
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certain brands in conjunction with hosting family occasions, especially when entertaining
those returning from abroad. Brands such as L&P, Pineapple Lumps and Twisties were often
mentioned. They were discussed as being “really Kiwi”, reflecting their status as virtually
unique to New Zealand. As a point of clarification, it is interesting to note that, as requested,
participants nominated particular brands rather than unique products. While it was not the
focus of discussions, participants implied that direct product substitutes, such as offered by
retailer/house brands, would not have been acceptable for these occasions. Specific brands
are essential for the purposes of reunions because of stories and memories attached to the
brand and to shared consumption occasions of these treats in the past.
Secondly, there were rituals surrounding the gifting of brands that held great significance
within the national context. Again, the types of snack and party food brands mentioned above
were popular gifts to send (or take) to New Zealanders domiciled abroad. The act of sending
and receiving these brands has great significance to those who share New Zealand national
identity—a point captured in a recent TVC for Pascall Pineapple Lumps (‘Lollies for grown
ups’ Simon’s big OE) where important symbols of Kiwi identity are juxtaposed with some
British icons, as Simon revels in his care package of lollies from home. The brand story, in
this case attached to Pineapple Lumps, helps provide a means to re/experience New Zealand
identity. Furthermore, there is a sense that only other New Zealanders share this experience—
the brand would not have the same effect on outsiders.
The national symbolism attached to other types of ritual gift giving situations was also
evident in discussions with participants. When mixing and socialising with foreigners,
particular brands were reportedly gifted to display pride in national identity. Brands such as
Cloudy Bay Sauvignon Blanc and 42BELOW vodka were named as providing the means for
the gift giver to validate their national identity. The high quality and distinctiveness of
nominated brands, combined with the brand story itself, allowed the participants to
experience national identity through brand consumption/gifting rituals. These various ritual
dimensions of brand consumption, as a means of re/experiencing national identity, have not
been reported in the extant marketing literature and represent a novel contribution of this
study.
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Many of the pair interviews elicited unprompted mention of iconic brands, particularly those
whose advertising was both memorable and well-loved—for example, Tui Yeah Right and
Toyota Bugger. In addition, the discussions above have highlighted examples of brands that
are deeply embedded in the national psyche and that, through their long use, role and
familiarity, have been designated as iconic New Zealand brands. Clearly, the term iconic
brand, first explicated by Holt (2003), has a variety of connotations. As discussed in the
literature review, Holt conceptualised iconic brands as embedded in culture, deriving their
power from cultural myths and stories. His retrospective personal assessment of legendary
US brands, published in Harvard Business Review, approached the topic from a brand
management consultant’s perspective. What the findings of this study suggest is that the
frame of reference used to judge iconicity in brands is quite different between consumers and
Holt’s brand management consultancy view, which prevails in the extant academic literature.
While the principle of iconic brands being anchored in a “cultural sweet spot” (Holt 2004,
p.xii) is not in question, the concept of iconic brands appears to be more complex than
theorised to date.
The findings in this study demonstrate that some iconic New Zealand brands link in with
commonly held ideas of community activities that contribute to what constitutes New
Zealand identity. This is one consumer connotation of an iconic brand. Personal brand
consumption experiences of buying and using, as well as consumption of widely circulating
brand stories, contributed to the nomination of Fairydown and Macpac as iconic brands in
this study. Both of these brands have strong stories in New Zealand, promoted over the years
through diverse marcoms, including publicity, celebrity endorsements and sponsorship.
However, there has been very little activity that would be strictly classified as brand
advertising in mass media (or digital brand communications). Fairydown is well known as the
sleeping bag brand used by Sir Edmund Hillary (a famous New Zealander) when he
conquered Mt Everest in 1953. His subsequent unprompted endorsement of the brand was
made public and the brand’s iconicity grew from there. Macpac, synonymous with backpacks
in New Zealand, has been an essential item for OE, a distinctive rite of passage undertaken by
generations of young adult New Zealanders.
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Both Fairydown and Macpac offer products that facilitate exploring and enjoying what is
known in New Zealand as the great outdoors. It would appear that their status as brand icons
comes from authentic stories of celebrity usage resonating with happy personal consumption
experiences. More than anything, it was the role that these iconic brands played in
exemplifying national identity and articulating significant myths that was important to
consumers. This conceptualisation is quite different to Holt’s (2006a, p.355) idea of iconic
brands as “ideological parasites and proselytisers” where their status is derived from brand
management efforts to cynically exploit cultural myths that help resolve contradictions and
anxieties in society.
Another connotation of iconic brands that has not been explored in the extant literature relates
to those brands whose reputation with current consumers is derived from intergenerational
influences and culturally embedded consumption. Nominated iconic brands, such as
Swanndri and Edmonds, may have had extensive brand marcoms with compelling brand
stories in years gone by. However, within the lifetime of the participants there has been very
little of this nature. The current iconic status of those brands seems to come from the role that
the brands play in everyday life—as one participant said, “they’ve just always been around.”
Their brand narratives have become uncoupled from the original stories. For example,
Edmonds ‘Sure to Rise’ story of reliability in baking powder has become somewhat
redundant as contemporary generations are unfamiliar with the problems of dud cakes.
Nevertheless, the logo incorporating rays of the rising sun represents one of New Zealand’s
most iconic brands even though the central visual metaphor has lost its relevance. Thus,
contemporary iconic brand narratives, such as Edmonds, have been truly co-created, with
consumers inserting their own life experiences within the framework once provided by the
brand.
A further observation from this study was the repeated usage of the term ‘iconic New
Zealand brands.’ There was a sense that such brands were iconic only in New Zealand
because their meaning and significance was closely tied to national knowledge—their iconic
status leveraged particular local narratives and memories. Iconic New Zealand brands are
characterised somewhat differently to the legendary global brands that Holt (2003, 2004)
interpreted. It is clear that the small selection of brands that Holt described drew exclusively
on American cultural myths and aspects of US national identity. However, American
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narratives of money, freedom, and the pursuit of happiness are widely recognised by those
outside the US. The impact of American culture has been widespread, with iconic brands
such as Coke, Disney, Pepsi, Levi’s, Nike and Marlboro acting as powerful cultural vectors
for those narratives, as Anholt recognises in his writing on nation brands (2005a). Returning
then to the topic of iconic New Zealand brands, the literature does not address how iconic
brands are experienced in the global context. In this respect, there are many unanswered
questions relating to iconic brands, other than legendary global brands. In particular, how
does a culturally specific sweet spot translate from one nation to another? And what happens
to the brand story when iconic brands from one culture become appropriated by another
culture? What cultural conversations occur and which processes are undertaken to align the
iconic brand with local culture?
While not the main focus of this research, there have been a number of unexpected issues of
iconic brands arising from the study. Family consumption heritage and intergenerational
usage seems to be an extremely important factor in driving iconic brand status in many of the
cases. Issues of local and global brands have also arisen. Holt’s (2003, 2004) work on
legendary brands represents only a small part of the whole story of iconic brands, and does
not give full voice to consumer experiences of iconicity in brands. Certainly, the topic of
iconic brands warrants further investigation and future research opportunities are discussed in
section 6.7 in the final chapter.
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Developing a sense of the usable past as a means of strengthening and consolidating national
identity has been theoretically referred to (and in some cases achieved) through the provision
of appropriate narratives. As the literature review suggests, national cinema, paintings, other
cultural objects and artefacts, and institutions such as public broadcasting, museums and
libraries are acknowledged as having a role to play in actively promoting consideration of a
nation’s usable past. However, the role of brands in providing a repository for national stories
of the past has not been recognised in the marketing literature. The findings, that relevant
narratives and imagery in brand marcoms facilitate discourse around national identity, extend
understanding of the usable past construct. They also point to the possibility of brand
marcoms as resources that may be used by institutions tasked with crafting the usable past
and building national identity.
The findings of this study highlighted that nostalgic appeals used in brand marcoms remind
viewers how their identities have evolved as individuals, families and as a nation. Both
personal nostalgia and historical nostalgia, as conceptualised by Stern (1992a), were evoked
by the prepared TVCs and in other brand marcoms nominated by the participants. These
findings confirm that, as the literature suggests, consumers of nostalgia in advertising use
narratives to locate themselves in time and place. Individual participant’s memories of their
personal past were evoked, particularly regarding consumption experiences at notable points
in their life. Aspects of historical nostalgia, relating to events, times and places that were
personally unknown, reminded participants of the shared past. For example, even though they
had never actually experienced farm life in the high country of the South Island, the Mainland
Cheese narratives of a slower pace of life resonated with participants, since they were already
familiar with this mythic dimension of place contributing to national identity. Thus, nostalgic
appeals helped participants to access rich personal memories as well as nationally shared
identity myths.
Evidence from the participants in this study indicates that nostalgic brand marcoms serve to
memorialise the past. As Stern suggests, nostalgic brand marcoms provide a record of an
idealised, fictionalised and sanitised past which allows “escape from a problem-laden
present” (1992a, p.20). The record serves to bind a generation together, and, as the findings
showed, acts as a tangible reminder of the past in conversations with other generations.
However, more than that, the findings suggest that such brand marcoms preserve and re-
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articulate the past, commemorating the times and places that are now considered worthy. It
would seem that the specifics of nostalgic appeals are tightly linked to particular generations
of consumers. Considering the generation specific dimensions of identity and nostalgia, the
findings also raise some questions for brand owners regarding target audiences and age
differences. For example, how do younger generations understand nostalgia that does not
relate to their age group? What does this mean for brands?
Other aspects of New Zealandness relating to narratives were also apparent in the findings.
New Zealand identity narratives were reported by the women participants to have a
predominance of male interests and concerns. Their conclusion was that brand narratives, in
many ways, reproduce the sense that New Zealand identity is homo-centric. Furthermore, it
would seem that brand stories are likely to perpetuate the status quo, and do not have strong
reasons to do otherwise. Another aspect of narratives, according to some participants, is that
the narratives of a nation such as New Zealand are quite distinct, despite the many outward
similarities in culture, say compared to Australia. For example, New Zealand identity
narratives are underpinned by egalitarian notions, of everyone helping everyone else, of no
one being too good to join in with the common person, team and community spirit, the crew
myth. There is also John Mulgan’s ‘Man Alone’ archetype, the “solitary, rootless, non-
conformist” (McCormick 1959, cited in Benson 1998). On the other hand, New Zealand does
not have a colonial outlaw ethos; there is no Wild West, Robin Hood or Ned Kelly
(Australian folk hero) story. The distinctiveness of a nation’s foundational narratives has
some interesting implications for brand owners as their brands’ stories play to audiences
outside their own borders. There are opportunities for future research to develop the topic of
brand narratives in export markets, especially regarding the power of brand stories where
culture is similar but national stories are not.
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The literature suggests brands are an ideologically loaded issue and consumers have
particular ideas on how they should relate to brands (Bengtsson and Ostberg 2006). In
designing this study, the expectation was that investigating how brands affect identity would
be a sensitive issue, potentially subject to social desirability biases. This proved to be the
case, as evidenced by the tendency for participants to initially underreport a range of
behaviours that were of particular interest in this study. However, the chosen method allowed
the researcher to probe further and to generate responses that advanced beyond politically
correct discourse. The two part method, incorporating the pair interview approach, was very
successful in eliciting original and rich responses on topics such as television and advertising
viewing behaviours, and brands. The discussion that follows evaluates the findings with
respect to these sensitive topics.
Discussing brands and their stories with other people was not a behaviour participants
willingly recalled or admitted to. However, despite having reservations, the participants
eventually revealed a variety of interactions with other people regarding brands and their
stories, as summarised in section 5.3.6. Again, probing techniques in combination with the
use of friendship pairs allowed the participants to reveal behaviours that they had originally
denied (refer to findings in sections 4.9.1 and 4.9.2). Before proceeding, it must be stressed
that this unwillingness/unmentionable aspect related to brands and brand stories; it did not
relate to discussions of actual products and services, consumption patterns, features and
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benefits, pricing deals, retailer offerings and other informative aspects of brand marcoms.
Discussions on such topics, prompted by direct or mediated brand consumption experiences,
were freely admitted as they were focussed on acceptable conversational material.
With respect to brands and brand stories, there could be various reasons for participants being
reluctant to recall discussing them with other people. Firstly, for some people brand stories,
as conversational topics, are not quite de rigueur, unless there is some special justification for
deviating from common practice. According to the findings, participants felt they had
permission to discuss brand stories if they were already the subject of public debate. This
occurs, for example, when brand marcoms become the subject of publicised complaints to the
Advertising Standards Authority, get nominated as the best or worst ad in the Fair Go Ad
Awards19 or generally gain notoriety in the media through particularly outrageous or
humorous content. If everyone else is talking about it, then discussion about brand marcoms
is acceptable.
Another explanation for not recalling discussions about brands could be that, compared to
other weightier or worthier topics, ephemeral brand narratives and imagery are sometimes
scarcely registered. Brand stories constitute common mass culture that is embedded and
familiar, often consumed in a perfunctory way. Furthermore, prevailing cultural conceptions
of brands mean that marcoms are popularly recognised simply as persuasive commercial
devices (Friestad and Wright 1995), rather than as works of visual art (such as photography)
in the manner outlined by Schroeder (2002). Thus, another possibility could be that the
participants in this study were not as skilled or used to making aesthetic responses to visuals
and stories attached to brands, or sharing responses with others, as they would be in
discussing a new movie or book.
In summary, the discussion in this section has confirmed the actuality of some cultural issues
relating to brand marcoms consumption that were addressed in the research design. The
particular cultural frames used by consumers, when thinking about brands, were considered
in advance in order to generate useful consumer insights into how brands affect national
19
This is a consumer affairs television programme that makes annual awards for best and worst in advertising.
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identity. Thus, social desirability biases were mitigated through the use of an appropriate
research method.
This discussion chapter has demonstrated to the reader, firstly, how the findings answer the
research questions. Secondly, the wider findings have been discussed with reference to the
inter-disciplinary literature review provided in chapter two. Finally, a discussion of
methodological issues that impacted on the ability of the study to address the research
questions has been offered.
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6 Chapter Six
CONCLUSIONS
6.1 Overview
This final chapter provides conclusions, a discussion of the contributions of this thesis and
implications for practitioners. It also addresses limitations of this study and proposes a future
research agenda. However, in order to frame the conclusions chapter, a recap of this
interpretive study of consumers’ lived experiences of brand and national identity is provided.
2. What are the social processes affecting national identity through brand experiences?
6.2 Conclusions
The conclusions that follow reflect on the overall academic research project. Achievements
regarding the research objectives are analysed. General conclusions relating to the worthiness
of the topic, the approach taken and the intellectual processes used are presented. A more
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specific exposition of the theoretical and methodological contributions, and implications for
practitioners is offered in subsequent sections.
The first objective of understanding the role that brand experiences play in national identity
has been achieved, particularly with respect to brand marcoms consumption and the social
processes that they facilitate. While the findings regarding consumer experiences of national
identity in brand marcoms confirmed accepted knowledge in the wider (non-marketing)
literature, the social processes constitute a relationship between brands and national identity
that was not known to exist, giving rise to new theoretical insights. Thus, the second
objective of developing theory that expands our understanding of brands as experiential
entities for use in national identity projects has also been achieved.
This thesis has taken concepts from the literatures of history, sociology, cultural studies, film,
television, and media—which are purely conceptual but have importance and potency—and
tied them together with marketing and consumer research on brands, communities and
identities. Based on the extensive evidence from various journals devoted to the specialist
topic, national identity is a highly relevant, contemporary form of consumer identity. The
marketing literature reports several studies into brands and different types of cultural identity,
such as queer identity (Kates 2004), regional identity (Thompson and Tian 2008) and
transnational identity (Cayla and Eckhardt 2008); others have examined phenomena such as
Irish (and other national) themed pubs (Brown and Patterson 2000). However, while
marketing and consumer research is somewhat concerned with the connections between
brands and identity, there is a significant gap in the extant literature, such that virtually
nothing has been published regarding national identity and brands. On the other hand, in
theory, according to the wider literature, there is an expectation that national identity is
impacted by brands, particularly by the narratives in their advertisements. The unique
perspective offered in this thesis combines inter-disciplinary concepts, and moves forward by
developing insights into national identity and brands from the point of view of the consumer.
It is interesting to speculate why researchers have not already considered the linkage between
brands and national identity. Early research into brands cast a marketing management/brand
owner lens over branding issues. The trend towards employing interpretive methods and
considering consumer uses of brands has coincided with accelerating globalisation and the
reduction in barriers between national borders. Not surprisingly, there has been a shift in
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mindset, such that national boundaries are often viewed as irrelevant to consumers in highly
industrialised nations, and thus, national identity has diminished as a potentially interesting
consumer construct. From a business perspective, brand practitioners have been focusing on
global opportunities and the similarities, rather than differences, between national markets.
Furthermore, as Holt (2004) suggests, models of marketing best practice promote branding
activities in most organisational environments that are not orientated towards national myths
and cultural identities. It would seem that few marketing and consumer researchers have
seriously considered that national identity might be a consumer construct worthy of study.
Having identified national identity as a matter of interest, this study’s methodology was
designed to elaborate the role of brands in consumer’s lives and capture the consumer
experience of brands within a social context. In the spirit of the brand culture perspective
(Schroeder and Salzer-Mörling 2006), particular emphasis was placed on investigating brand
consumption experiences in a meaningful communal situation because this more fully
simulates actual experiences situated in social milieux. The methodological importance of
this study is tied to the development of the two-part interview method. Of particular
significance was the systematised friendship pair interview approach (previously reported by
others) which was extensively used in this study to provide a powerful means of exploring
communal issues, and especially allowed social processes to be investigated. This method
offered some unique potential in terms of data generation and analysis, including the cross-
checking of emergent themes with both members of the dyad. As discussed earlier, the
friendship pair interview approach has been reported in only a small number of marketing
and consumer research studies.
The research aimed to theorise the way that consumers utilise brand narratives for their own
purposes, with reference to the desire to create and re-create a sense of personal purpose and
belonging within a national group. Clearly, the potential for brands to contribute to national
community projects has been established in this thesis. Although brands have not previously
been credited with contributing to productive and enabling forces within society, this study
has provided evidence that brands contribute to national identity, a stabilising force that
contributes a sense of security and meaning to consumers’ lives. The idea that brands,
through their marcoms, are used by consumers in negotiating and imagining their national
community is new and hints at opportunities for brand owners and their advertising agencies
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as they consider how they might be more sensitive to consumption experiences and consumer
uses of brand advertising.
An important aspect of this research design has been the inclusion of both local brands and
recognised foreign brands. Clearly, both local and foreign brands can play a part in
experiencing national identity. At least one foreign brand was deliberately incorporated in the
viewing schedule for each friendship pair interview, which generated interesting
commentary. However, the most powerful evidence of multi-national brands contributing to
New Zealand national identity came unprompted in both part one and part two of the
interviews. More than anything, this finding highlights the potency of brand narratives,
showing how brands can deliver stories that resonate with national community, and that can
allow national identity to be re-experienced.
The potential for brands to assist defined communities (other than the types of brand
communities referred to by Muñiz and O'Guinn 2001) and help in the outward expression and
celebration of key community values has already been described by Kates (2006). This study
takes Kates’ ideas further and builds on Elliott and Wattanasuwan’s (1998) model, providing
evidence of brands as a resource for assisting consumers in discursive reproduction and
negotiation of national identity, inter-generational transfer of national identity, acculturation
processes, and maintenance of national identity boundaries. The inter-personal processes
facilitated by brands are an extension of Ritson and Elliott’s (1999) concept of the social uses
aspect of advertising. As the evidence shows, brands impact on the formation of one’s
national identity without necessarily being experienced firsthand by the personal self.
This study leads to the conclusion that brand narratives can be strongly aligned with the
foundational narratives of the nation. Through their stories, brands become active cultural
agents of national identity. Thus, brands are potentially more powerful resources than
previously imagined. The strength of brand narratives as vehicles driving national identity is
not only interesting from a consumer identity perspective; it is a completely unrecognised
asset that brand owners may be able to harness. Furthermore, public agencies tasked with
building national identity may be able to use brand narratives to greater advantage,
celebrating the heritage and stories of brands that are locally loved.
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New brand theory has been developed from a consumer experience study situated in a
particular context. The new theory is underpinned by a broad range of cross-disciplinary
theory. While the findings in this research relate to the specific national context, the thesis
has theoretical relevance to both researchers and practitioners beyond any particular national
market context. This interpretive study takes a perspectival view and does not claim that the
findings are objective or exhaustive. The aim has been to show that the results are
supportable and to generate new theory which can be tested by others. The quality of this
research has been dependent on the creation of an overall narrative which best vivifies the
experiences affecting consumers. Findings have been presented with confidence because
trustworthy and defensible research processes have been used.
7. confirmation that imagery and narratives of national identity are provided by brand
resources;
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9. evidence that foreign brands can provide local national identity narratives and
imagery;
10. evidence that brand marcoms function as a script for consumer experience;
The most important and novel theoretical contribution of this thesis is the development of
theory which accounts for the social processes affecting national identity through brands.
Discursive reproduction, intergenerational transfer, acculturation and national identity
boundary work have all been identified as those processes affecting national identity. The
new theory posits that brand consumption experiences permit, support and impact on the
social connections and relationships with other people in a national community.
This study has brought into focus the role that brands play in the nation, as treasure-houses
that capture national stories. It has also highlighted that, whether or not society feels that
brands should play such a role, it is clear that brands do play that role. Brands, through their
narratives, actively affect national identity and represent powerful cultural agents, embedded
in the everyday life of the consuming nation.
The model of ‘Consumption and the Symbolic Project of the Self,’ proposed by Elliott and
Wattanasuwan (1998), has been the springboard for launching into a deeper understanding of
how brand consumption experiences impact on the social self. This study makes a theoretical
contribution by exploring shared social selves (national selves) and the brand generated
national ‘communitas’ (Arnould and Price 1993) resulting from the consumption of mediated
brand resources.
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This thesis contributes to theory regarding what consumers do with brands. It is one of only a
small number of studies of brand advertising consumption where the focus is on consumers
as interpreters with non-purchase intentions. The entire range of findings offers numerous
contextualised insights into how consumers utilise brand narratives for their own purposes. In
particular, this study expands understanding of brands as experiential entities used by
consumers in national identity projects.
Another novel contribution of this study comes from the finding that brand consumption
rituals provide the means for experiencing national identity. New insights were provided
regarding the role of specific brand stories, memories attached to brands and shared
consumption occasions when hosting family functions and on gift giving occasions. This
study also makes a small contribution to knowledge by elaborating important rituals
surrounding New Zealand brand consumption.
Findings in this study provided evidence, confirming the theoretical prediction, that imagery
and narratives of national identity are provided by brand resources. Following on from this
point, the study contributes to knowledge by demonstrating that consumers recognise
imagery and narratives of national identity provided by brand marcoms and experience
national identity as a result of such brand marcoms consumption. The study highlights the
feelings of belonging that are engendered through consumption and thus moves beyond
existing understanding of brand marcoms merely embedded in culture and reflecting national
culture.
This research is more than a study of local brands and the impact of local manufacturing
heritage. It makes a contribution to theory regarding multi-national brands, showing that
foreign brands can provide local national identity narratives and imagery. The findings
provide clear evidence that brands with known and recognised foreign origins are not
precluded from being used by New Zealand consumers as resources for national identity
projects.
Another contribution of this study came from the finding that brand marcoms function as a
script for consumer experience, particularly relating to experiences of national identity. This
insight builds on Ritson and Elliott’s (1999) study regarding the social uses of advertising
amongst adolescents, demonstrating social uses of advertising in a different age cohort and
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for different, national identity social purposes (and employing the processes of discursive
reproduction, intergenerational transfer, acculturation and national identity boundary work).
The last theoretical contribution relates to the five part categorisation of national identity
which was developed for this study. While this is not strictly a contribution to branding or
marketing theory, it provides a more complete articulation of how New Zealand consumers
experience national identity than has been provided in academic writing to date. It also
provides a framework which may be used for other studies of lived experiences of New
Zealand national identity, whether they are consumption experiences or related to other
dimensions of existence.
This study makes several methodological contributions which are listed and then more fully
discussed. This study:
1. articulates theory building using introspective narrative methods;
2. develops a two-part interview procedure;
3. uses friendship pairs in-depth interviews.
The foremost methodological contribution of this thesis lies in the articulation of the
philosophical issues of introspection and narrative construction central to building theory.
This research made extensive use of a disciplined approach to introspection and the
researcher has reflected on the way that introspection is deeply embedded in entire research
projects. The role of the researcher as a key informant of the study, whether through the
formalised collection of introspection by the researcher in narrative mode or in more
unconscious informal ways, has been highlighted in this study. Using different types of
introspections and being reflexive, methodically thinking about thinking, has added richness
to the findings.
Another contribution is the unique two part depth interview procedure developed by the
researcher to create access to consumers’ lived experiences of brands and national identity.
This powerful protocol captured national identity through the provision of autobiographical
narratives. It then provided a context for ‘real’ social interaction between consumers,
facilitating conversations between friends about familiar advertisements and brands. Each of
the two parts, taken on their own, makes a novel and powerful methodological contribution.
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The life history narrative technique does not appear to be employed in studies published in
consumer research, branding or wider marketing literature. Furthermore, it had the advantage
of truly allowing individual participants to tell their own life story as it related to New
Zealand identity, so that personal experiences emerged in a way that could highlight both
individualised and common experiences. Overall, using narrative approaches in this manner
has made a worthy methodological contribution.
The use of friendship pair depth interviews combined with prior autobiographical interviews
makes a novel methodological contribution. As evidenced in the findings and in prior studies
(see, Banister and Hogg 2001, 2004; Bayley and Nancarrow 1998; Hindmarch et al. 2005),
friendship pairs have the advantage of generating conversation independent of the
researcher’s probes or agenda. Thus, the researcher is placed in a more powerful position,
being both an observer and participant in the interviews. This is especially the case when
prior ‘benchmarking’ individual interviews (such as the collection of autobiographical
narratives) have been conducted earlier. This friendship pairs approach has considerable
potential as a method for other researchers interested in generating narratives that capture
normal social interactions and has been the subject of significant favourable comment in
feedback received by the researcher regarding articles under review.
The friendship pair interview technique is scarcely reported in consumer research and
marketing academic literature, with most studies focusing on children, young people and
dysfunctional or vulnerable populations of interest to nursing, family studies, social
psychology and education researchers. The limitation of many studies that aim to investigate
social processes and interactions between adults is that they actually study individuals
removed from any social context, thus not capturing the richness of normal social
interactions. The use of friendship pair depth interviews to investigate social processes
affecting national identity through brand experiences overcomes this weakness to a large
extent. Another successful feature of the friendship pair interview technique was the effect of
one friend’s disclosure of brand themed conversations in encouraging a more reticent friend.
Once one person had revealed an occasion when they had discussed New Zealandness in
brand ads with people, the other in the friendship pair became more willing to admit
something similar. Discussions between friendship pairs got ‘the ball rolling’ when perhaps a
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single participant would not have provided such fulsome responses to the researcher (if
indeed they admitted to any brand resourced conversations with others at all).
The two part technique added richness to expressions of national identity. Most
autobiographical narratives captured positive and successful dimensions of New Zealand
identity that participants were proud of. To a certain extent these narratives might have been
somewhat sanitised, politically correct expressions of national identity reflecting an expected
heroic view—putting a good face on things. More critical and negative dimensions of
national identity were exposed during joint discussions, as introspection progressed from the
self to the wider community. Analysis of pair conversations revealed personal attitudes and
behaviours pertinent to national identity relating to racism, drinking, political correctness,
male domination in society and the nature of personal relationships that were not evident in
autobiographical narratives.
A further methodological contribution was the inclusion of a member checking process that
involved feeding back emergent interpretations to the participants, as well as offering the
opportunity to discuss, edit or expand on their original contributions. Branding studies rarely
report such a procedure whose benefits include extending the process of meaning making and
interpretation, enhancing the analysis, improving the rigour of the study, and respecting the
contribution of the participants. In this study, where participants were interviewed both singly
and in pairs, feedback from individuals after their paired interview added richness as the
participants reflected on their contribution with the friend. As far as is known, this follow-up
of friendship pair interviews has not been reported in the marketing and consumer research
literature before and as such represents a novel methodological contribution.
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Implications for practitioners and the wider community are listed, followed by a discussion of
these issues, and the ‘real world’ relevance and contribution of the study. This study:
1. provides insights for brand owners into leveraging brands further through
intensifying brand messages and enhancing consumer reception, since a brand’s
agents are responsible for providing stories, the usable past and pre-scripted ways of
talking about national identity;
2. concludes that brand marcoms creators could benefit from utilising socio-cultural
readings of brands with respect to national identity, including understanding the role
of brand stories and brand consumption in national consumer rituals;
3. concludes that brand owners should consider aspects of national identity and the
power of their brand stories used in other markets, where culture is similar but
national stories are not;
4. generates insights for 100% Pure New Zealand campaigns, relating to the benefits
derived from considering the alignment between expressions of national identity and
their brand;
5. recognises the role of brands as active cultural agents of national identity and thus,
has implications for Governments, policy makers and institutions looking toward
nation building exercises;
A key message for brand owners from this study is that consumers can derive value from
brands in ways that were previously unknown, that is, in recreating national identity. The
study points to the potential benefits that may be derived from being conscious of the role
that brand marcoms can play in national identity. The researcher has clearly outlined four
social processes where consumers utilise brand resources to affect national identity; in
particular, the matter of intergenerational transfer is one that has real potential for brand
owners as they build long term loyalty towards their brand with successive generations of
consumers. The findings also underscore the important role and significance of brand
marcoms as a widely accessible cultural resource affecting national identity. So far, most
brands have only unwittingly contributed to national identities and have yet to take conscious
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advantage of this pre-eminent position as the supplier of nationally useful narratives that
make memories of the past accessible, and as provider of conversational agendas.
Following on from the implications above, this study draws attention to the need for
creatives, and others involved in the process of developing advertisements, to utilise more
socio-cultural readings of brands as resources. A more informed and deliberate approach
might be of real benefit to both consumers and brand owners as they move towards
understanding elements of national identity that are central to a national community. If
advertisers were to understand which parts of usable past could be used or conceived as being
usable at any particular time that would also benefit brands. Furthermore, the study has
identified that consumption heritage, and the rituals surrounding brand consumption,
constitute dimensions of consumer value that are important although underplayed in the trade
press and practitioner publications. As such, this represents a new avenue to consider in any
brand equity building programme.
The real world relevance of this study extends further than consideration of domestic
markets. There are implications for brand owners as they enter foreign markets and utilise
marcoms that were more or less designed with the home market in mind. This study
emphasises the particular narratives of identity within a national market and participants have
clearly expressed their distaste for stories that ‘are not us’. This would seem to suggest that as
they develop new national markets, brand owners should take particular care with their
marcoms, and either incorporate appropriate national narratives or remove trace of offending
ones. Again, this would require the brand owner and its agents to utilise socio-cultural
readings of brands in each of the markets they enter.
There are some interesting implications for brand New Zealand and the 100% Pure New
Zealand campaigns arising from this study. The previous Labour Government had a policy of
building New Zealand national identity through various cultural strategies, and through the
development of New Zealand as a tourism brand, from 1999 onwards. As their website
suggests, “100% Pure New Zealand was designed to bring the core aspects of what makes
New Zealand unique back onto centre stage” http://10yearsyoung.tourismnewzealand.com/.
While the 100% Pure New Zealand campaigns have had an outward focus, playing to
audiences in key foreign target markets, there is high brand awareness in the local population.
Various aspects of the campaign have generated positive publicity and pride in New Zealand,
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including the America’s Cup activities, Lord of the Rings success, the giant rugby ball venue
in Paris, exhibitions at the Chelsea Flower Show and the World of Wearable Arts Award
Show. The expectation in this study was that participants would consider themselves to be an
exemplar of brand New Zealand, that is to say, that connections between their expressions of
national identity and the 100% Pure New Zealand campaigns would be made. However,
somewhat surprisingly, this was not the case in the interviews and it leaves open the question
of whether those who help deliver New Zealand tourism experiences (the local population)
are in accord with what is being promised externally.
The reconceptualisation of brands as active agents of national identity has implications for
governments and policy makers as they look toward nation building exercises. Government
agencies and non-governmental organisations (such as the Carnegie Council in the US) have
already realised the benefit of utilising cultural artefacts to highlight a usable past, drawing a
nation together. However, since brands are active cultural agents of national identity there is
real potential for brands and their marcoms to feature strongly in museum exhibitions, events,
Ministry of Culture and Heritage publications and websites etc. While this study has
implications for the curators who support cultural experiences and preserve national heritage,
there are also real opportunities for brand owners to manage their brands in such a way as to
facilitate national culture and to promote ways of re-experiencing national identity through
their brands. If brands took their role in national identity seriously, they could design their
annual marcoms plans to incorporate some relevant and appropriate consumer activities,
collaborating with national cultural heritage strategists and administrators. Such an approach
would be a win-win strategy, providing consumers with added value, reinforcing national
identity and strengthening brand equity at the same time.
Even though society may have a slight sense that brands should not be part of the national
identity landscape, the evidence is clear that, in the New Zealand setting at least, brands are
significant cultural markers. Kiwiana makes quite extensive use of brands whose stories are a
testament to inventiveness, innovation, entrepreneurship and New Zealand national values—
for example, Four Square20, Crown Lynn21, Wattie’s tomato sauce, L&P, All Blacks, Red
20
Four Square is known as a chain of small supermarkets, recognised by the iconic Mr Four Square symbol.
21
Crown Lynn is known as a ceramics manufacturer famous for its utilitarian tableware.
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bands gumboots and summers at the beach with Tip Top. It is up to brand owners to
understand the true experiential value of their brand in a national context and to leverage
whatever national status they already have for the benefit of all stakeholders.
6.6 Limitations
The limitations of this thesis stem from several factors. Firstly, the scope of this study is
limited by the fact that findings are drawn from interviews with 20 women in a particular
demographic cohort from the wider Auckland region. National identity was studied within a
single market, the New Zealand context. As stated in the introduction to this thesis, the effect
of brands on national identity is an under-developed research area. Thus, exploratory research
whose emphasis was discovery oriented was appropriate. An in-depth examination of
participants’ life stories provided a richly contextualised understanding of experiences of
New Zealand national identity and brands. The researcher makes no claim that the findings
are generalisable to the wider population in New Zealand or further afield; generalisations are
made to theory. Findings from the deep insights into consumers’ lives have been linked to
theory and used to generate theory.
There are limitations in this study relating to difficulties of capturing details of discussions
between consumers relating to the use of brand communications as conversational resources.
Since admitting to brands having use or cultural relevance may be tantamount to admitting
moral bankruptcy and intellectual shallowness for some consumers, there are inherent
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problems in getting beyond the culturally accepted ways of relating to brands (Bengtsson and
Ostberg 2006). The method used in this study was designed to reduce participants’ sensitivity
to the issue. Specific measures were taken, such as talking about advertising (as if it were the
focal construct) and making minimal reference to brands in the contact phase and during the
first, autobiographical session. During the friendship pair interview a funnel approach was
employed (Cavana et al. 2001), starting with broader issues of national identity themes and
specific advertisements before venturing into more specific questioning about brands.
Overall, the idea was to de-emphasise the importance of brands, letting discussion of them
arise naturally until it was absolutely necessary to explicitly mention them. These procedures
were designed to mitigate the problems of sensitivity toward an acknowledgment of the
personal uses of brands.
While it was not a critical part of this study, there were limited insights into the reported
purchase and consumption behaviours surrounding brands nominated for their contribution to
feelings of New Zealandness. It seems likely that more extensive probing would have
uncovered a greater range of reasons for not buying nominated brands. In particular, it was
surprising that, when declaring they did not buy or use their nominated brands, none of the
participants mentioned preferred substitute brands. Follow-up questions would most likely
have provided useful details and given a broader perspective on brands and feelings of New
Zealandness.
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This study offers many potential avenues for future research. One of the most important
follow-up studies would be to conduct replications in other national settings. Future
collaborations with researchers in Australia—as a neighbouring, geographically isolated
nation with similar cultural roots—would enhance the value of the original study. Likewise,
studies conducted in other more dissimilar countries, particularly the USA or members of the
European Union, would demonstrate that the findings represent more than a single country
effect.
This study could be developed further by investigating age and gender impacts on effects of
brands on national identity. Males, younger consumers and older consumers are all obvious
categories of participants that might provide useful insights into brand experiences and
national identity. In particular, little has been reported in the extant literature about gendered
readings of brand narratives. Furthermore, intergenerational comparisons within families
regarding consumption experiences of brands and the impact on national identity would make
an interesting study. Findings would contribute to existing knowledge about intergenerational
influences on brands. In addition, studies that broaden the range of participant ages would
provide a clearer view on any demographic trends regarding the affect of brands on national
identity.
As a contrast to the study of participants who are long standing members of the New Zealand
national community, future research might also consider participants who are new
immigrants. Findings already indicate brand ads are used by the ‘in-group’ of New
Zealanders to acculturate immigrants and visitors. However, little is known of how new
immigrants themselves might use these brand resources. Such a study would make a
worthwhile contribution regarding the way brands are used for purposes other than the purely
commercial ones intended by their owners.
The enduring impact of brands on the national identity of diasporic consumers is another
important issue worthy of future research. Little is known about the importance of brands in
maintaining national identity in a context set apart from the homeland nation, either in terms
of direct or mediated consumption. As brand experiences become progressively more
computer mediated, the potential for studying the specific impact of digital communications
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Apart from research with participants that differ in some way from the original study, there
are many other opportunities for researching brands and national identity. Further studies
should be undertaken to answer questions such as: What is the relationship between national
identity and the brands that are advertised with respect to sales and consumption? There are
broad questions to be answered regarding the role that the entire range of a brand’s marketing
communication programme plays in creating value for consumers and for brands. Further
research is needed to evaluate not just ads but celebrity endorsement arrangements,
sponsorship, product placement in movies and well coordinated publicity activities that
strengthen brand stories and are relevant to the nation. The development of brand narratives
that contribute to national identity is under researched. More work is needed to address the
role of brand marketing communications in offering fragments which form part of the wider
social milieu of resources that surround consumers and contribute to identity projects. Such
research would add to the understanding of what consumers do with brands.
There is real potential for further research into aspects of iconic brands, including the iconic
brands of a country. Historical case research could be used to answer such questions as
‘When do brands become popularly known as iconic national brands?’ Public and media
discourse analysis could be used to trace the evolution of specific brand stories that have
developed significance for national identity, to answer the question of how narratives for
iconic brands develop. More research is needed to understand the importance of consumer
consumption heritage in creating iconic brands.
There is also future research potential for reanalysing the existing interviews with a view to
developing greater understanding of discursive constructions of national identity. A more
detailed study of the linguistic features and narrative constructions would be possible,
especially if the original transcripts were annotated using linguistic conventions. The
contribution of such a study would be in revealing more details of the discursive strategies
and linguistic devices used to construct both national uniqueness and differences with respect
to other nations. Finally, future studies of brands and national identity might also employ a
critical discourse analysis approach to investigate the way that ads for nationally iconic
brands reproduce (or resist) social and political inequality, power abuse or domination.
219
CHAPTER SIX _____ CONCLUSIONS
In conclusion, this study has done what it set out to achieve. An entirely original idea has
been fully investigated. The thesis, that brands affect national identity, has been put forward
and discussed in a logical manner. A comprehensive review of theories from marketing and
consumer research literature, cross-fertilised by concepts from several other disciplines, has
been developed to provide a foundation for the study. The objectives of this doctoral research
have been accomplished by addressing specific, clearly defined research questions. This
thesis makes an original academic contribution to knowledge in the field of branding, and
enlarges what is known about what consumers do with brands. It makes specific and
substantial theoretical contributions by establishing new links between existing ideas and
areas of knowledge. In particular, this thesis offers new theory regarding the social processes
that affect national identity through brand consumption.
This thesis also contributes innovations in research design and methodology using a creative
approach to meeting particular challenges in data collection. An appropriate and ethical
research design has been used to collect and analyse data. The strengths and limitations of the
methodology have been justified and discussed, particularly with respect to the philosophical
issues of introspection and narrative construction. The method has been explained in
sufficient detail that it is easily replicable by another researcher. The two part depth interview
procedure, involving autobiographical narratives and friendship pair interviews, constitutes
an original methodological contribution. Sound and appropriate conclusions have been drawn
from the data. The claims made in this thesis are based on strong evidence, examples of
which have been provided for the reader. Limitations of the study and its findings have been
acknowledged and directions for future research have also been considered.
Many of the ideas in this thesis have already undergone academic scrutiny through double
blind peer review at international conferences and journals. One paper has been published in
a journal (Bulmer and Buchanan-Oliver 2010), and another is forthcoming (Bulmer and
Buchanan-Oliver 2011). Four refereed conference papers have been presented in Europe, the
United States and Australia, and published in full via conference proceedings. Thus, there is
clear, independent evidence of the academic contribution made by this thesis research.
220
CHAPTER SIX _____ CONCLUSIONS
However, this thesis has value beyond academia. The study has strong foundations in ‘real
world’ branding, being informed by contemporary advertising industry practitioners, and
utilising a wide range of actual brands and their recent marketing communications.
Furthermore, the study’s participants were drawn from society beyond the university and the
often researched student body. The findings of this research have implications for
professional practice, relating to both brand management and marketing communications
organisations. While the study has direct implications for the New Zealand market, the
findings are relevant to brand owners everywhere as they look outside their own borders and
seek to understand the power of their brands in other national markets. Finally, the study has
implications for social policy as governments seek to build stability and social cohesion
through the development of national identity. The role of brands as part of the national
identity landscape has been established and the question of how brands affect national
identity has been answered. Brands become active cultural agents of national identity.
221
CHAPTER SIX _____ CONCLUSIONS
222
APPENDIX 1 INTERVIEW GUIDE
Interview Guide
Interview Type One:
Tell me your story of being a New Zealander and the things and experiences that are
important to your New Zealand identity. Start wherever you like. Please take the time you
need. I won’t interrupt. I’ll just take some notes for afterwards.
Follow up on points of interest, clarifying experiences of national identity and fitting into a
New Zealander mould
• Tell me about the typical New Zealander - their personality & characteristics
(If it has not already been volunteered during the course of the interview)
223
APPENDIX 1 INTERVIEW GUIDE
Thank you very much sharing your experiences with me and giving up your time today. I am
very grateful to you for assisting me in my research.
The second interview will be semi-structured. The researcher will have posted each of the
two friends a summary of the key themes of national identity that arose from their own life
story interview. They will be asked: Have I got the key themes from your story right? What
else should I add or change?
Ensure participants are briefed that this is essentially them talking to each other and
discussing things. Should be seated so that they can talk to each other easily and see the
screen.
At the time of the 2nd interview, follow up with collating their feedback/revisions etc.
Give them the key themes summary from their friend’s story & let them read it.
1. When you compare the summaries, how are your key themes similar and different?
BOTH
Probe about any differences [tailor to suit the situation, being sensitive to any potential
discomfort or embarrassment] – No real differences in opinions – only differences due to
omission? Discuss the reasoning behind apparently conflicting views? Can they resolve the
differences? Agree to differ?
Analysis of TVCs – repeat 6 times. (Must include a non NZ owned brand – McDonalds,
Dulux, Toyota, Mitre 10 Mega)
Now I have some advertisements for us to look at. I’d like you to keep in mind the key themes
from both your stories. SHOW TVC
2. Do you think that any of the key themes are included in the ad?
Which ones?
224
APPENDIX 1 INTERVIEW GUIDE
3. Do you think <brand> has been successful in suggesting New Zealandness in a way
that matches up with your key themes?
4. Can you think of some (other) brands which help you feel the way you do about New
Zealandness? Note them down to discuss later
5. Thinking about those brands, have the stories in the ads for these brands changed
over the years? (Could rephrase: story = summary of what the ad is about)
6. Have the changing ad stories in some way affected your thoughts on New
Zealandness? If so, how.
7. Do you talk to other people about the stories in ads? If so, discuss (Why do you talk to
some people and not others?)
8. In talking to your family, friends or workmates, have you ever commented on New
Zealandness in ads? If yes, what were your comments?
Is your use/purchase linked to a feeling of New Zealandness that you get from this brand?
225
APPENDIX 1 INTERVIEW GUIDE
226
APPENDIX 2 CONSUMER PARTICIPANT INFORMATION SHEET
Department of Marketing
My name is Sandy Bulmer. I am a student at The University of Auckland enrolled for a PhD
(Doctor of Philosophy) degree in the Department of Marketing.
You are invited to participate in my research and I would appreciate any assistance you can
offer me. As part of my thesis I am conducting research into New Zealand national identity
and the expression of national identity in advertising. Right now I am seeking people who are
willing and able to spend some time talking with me and telling their point of view.
I would like to discuss your ideas and personal story about being a New Zealander and New
Zealand national identity, in a research session which would take up to one and one half
hours (90minutes). At a later time I would like to have another discussion with you and a
woman friend. In this second session I would like you to talk with your friend and me about
New Zealand national identity briefly before discussing some advertisements. I have chosen
some well-known television advertisements for the study and these will be presented in story
board/poster form for us to analyse. This second research session would also take up to one
and one half hours (90minutes). In addition, some time after the second session you will be
invited to read through your interview transcripts and to notify me of any changes or
omissions. This process may take another 30 minutes. After you have had a chance to read
the documents I will contact you and make a note of your comments and feedback and will
edit the transcripts accordingly. Any material that you wish to be omitted will be excluded
from the study. However you are under no obligation to participate in this study.
Please note that this is a study of personal experiences and opinions. There are no right or
wrong answers. I would prefer to audiotape the discussion sessions but this would only be
done with your consent (and the consent of your friend). If you wish to have a digital audio
copy of your interviews I will provide this for you. After the session you may withdraw from
the study at any time up to 28 August 2009.
I will keep everything expressed in the discussions completely confidential. A professional
transcription service will be used to convert the audio-tapes into documents. The
transcriber(s) will be required to sign an agreement to protect the confidentiality of the
research data and the participants. Each participant will be required to consent to maintaining
the confidentiality of the interviews in relation to her friend. However, it is not possible to
give an absolute guarantee of confidentiality where other people are involved in this project.
Audio-tapes and transcriptions will be stored for no more than a period of 6 years from the
date of interview, in a locked cabinet in the Department of Marketing at the University of
Auckland.
Individual’s names will not be identified in the research report. If the information you
provide is reported/published, this will be done in a way that does not identify you as its
source. The responses from this study may be used in other advertising studies and may be
used for publication purposes.
In recognition of the time commitment required for this research I will make a $100 donation
in your name to a charity that you chose from a list of charities provided. You will receive
acknowledgment that the donation has been made as specified. It remains your absolute right
to withdraw yourself or your information from the research, irrespective of whether or not my
donation has already been made.
If you are interested in finding out more and participating in this study please phone me at
either ph (09) 624-3366 after hours or on my mobile (021) 298-7503 OR e-mail me
s.bulmer@auckland.ac.nz Alternatively you may fill in the attached consent form and send it
to me at the address below.
Thank you very much for your time and help in making this study possible.
Sandy Bulmer
Department of Marketing
The University of Auckland
Private Bag 92019
Auckland 1142.
My supervisor is:
Associate Professor Margo Buchanan-Oliver
Department of Marketing
The University of Auckland
Private Bag 92019
Auckland 1142. Telephone 373 7599, extension 86898
228
APPENDIX 3 CONSUMER CONSENT FORM
Department of Marketing
I have been given and have understood an explanation of this research project. I have had an
opportunity to ask questions and have them answered.
I understand that the results of this study may be used for publication purposes.
I understand that individual’s names will not be identified in the research report or in any
other publication relating to this study.
I understand that my responses may be used in future advertising studies.
I understand that I may withdraw myself, or any information traceable to me, at any time up
to 28/08/09 without giving a reason.
Name:
Date:
229
APPENDIX 3 CONSUMER CONSENT FORM
230
APPENDIX 4 PARTICIPANT DONATION TO CHARITY FORM
Department of Marketing
Your time and commitment to this research is very much appreciated. By way of thanks for
your involvement in this study I will make a $100 donation to a charity on your behalf and in
your name.
• Please choose one of the named organisations on the list below.
• I will send you a letter verifying that your donation has been made as specified.
• It will remain your absolute right to withdraw yourself or your information from the
research, irrespective of whether or not the donation has already been made.
Please tick one
Auckland City Mission
Cancer Society of New Zealand
IHC
National Heart Foundation
Red Cross New Zealand
Royal New Zealand Foundation for the Blind
Royal New Zealand Plunket Society
Royal New Zealand Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals (RNZSPCA)
St John New Zealand
Surf Life Saving New Zealand
231
APPENDIX 4 PARTICIPANT DONATION TO CHARITY FORM
232
APPENDIX 5 TRANSCRIBER CONFIDENTIALITY AGREEMENT
Department of Marketing
This research is being undertaken by Sandy Bulmer of the University of Auckland. The
purpose of this project is to investigate how brands affect national identity.
If you have any questions or concerns about this study you may contact the Researcher at:
Sandy Bulmer, Department of Marketing, The University of Auckland
Private Bag 92019, Auckland 1142. Email: s.bulmer@auckland.ac.nz
Mobile telephone: 021 298 7503 Home telephone: 09 624 3366
233
APPENDIX 5 TRANSCRIBER CONFIDENTIALITY AGREEMENT
234
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Script:
Teenage boy: I just don’t want to see you anymore. See ya.
Lyrics:
E awhi reinga,
We embrace with the spirits
E awhi tāua.
when we embrace each other.
235
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Script:
Female Voiceover:
What is changing?
Now a whole family of teas that know this country inside out.
236
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Artist: Steriogram
Lyrics:
237
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Script:
238
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Script:
Interviewer:
Nothing beats a bit of bacon. But how can you be sure it’s the real deal?
I’m looking for a bacon that’s a real slice of New Zealand.
And I think I’ve found it.
All new Hellers sensational bacon.
Vox pop 1: Very, very nice
Vox pop 2: No. That’s lovely bacon.
Vox pop 3: Beautiful
Vox pop 4: Yummy
Vox pop 5: Oh I like this
Interviewer: I was gonna say this.
Vox pop 6: It’s good stuff
Vox pop 7: You can taste the smokiness with it
Vox pop 8: Manuka
Vox pop 9: 10/10
Interviewer: So there you have it.
All new Hellers Sensational 100% New Zealand bacon.
It sure as hell is.
Funny that!
239
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Brand: Interislander
TVC title: Filmed by the Maaka family of Petone (1:00)
Brand owner: Kiwi Rail New Zealand
Launch date: July 2005
Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi
Film & Sound Editor: Tom Ackroyd
Music track: Maybe tomorrow
Artist: Golden Horse
Lyrics:
There's a story I know
We all leave and let go
There is nothing to hold us
In a moment of time
When the fruit becomes wine
And the thought becomes the memory
Trying to please me
Making it easy
It won't be there
It won't be there
In your life
In your life
240
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Brand: Kiwibank
TVC title: It’s ours (1:00)
Launch date: April 2006
Agency: Ogilvy
Creative Director: Roy Meares
Production Company: Robbers Dog Films
Director: Adam Stevens
Voice: John Clark aka Fred Dagg
Script:
241
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Brand: L&P
Back in the day, the place to be all summer was the school pool. Luckily your Mum was on
the PTA and had the pool key. So as long as Mr Moore the caretaker hadn’t dumped chlorine
in that morning you could do some choice bombs. Depth chargers were the best as you
always soaked Teresa McKee who had forgotten to take off her glasses and just used to sit on
the steps. And wearing your boardies meant not only could you chuck out your man skins
you could make a paper bag popping sound when you hit the water. And after that you’d gulp
some L&P and cheese and tomato sammies which you ate and drank too quickly which
meant you couldn’t go swimming for at least an hour. Which was rad ‘cos you needed to heat
up in the sun anyway. You were there and so was L&P.
242
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
I always thought that me and Billy Wallace would be good friends. His folks had the farm
next to ours, so we grew up together. Well, we went to school together and played footie
together. Then I took over the farm and he went to work for Mainland. So we kept in touch.
Now of course the kids work the farm. So Billy and me have time for a bit more fishing. I
always thought me and Billy Wallace would be good friends. But, we’ll see. These things
take time you know
Tagline:
243
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Script:
Strapline on screen:
McDonalds logo
Music lyrics:
Kiwis love,
Hot pools, rugby balls,
McDonalds, snapper schools,
World peace, woolly fleece,
Ronald and raising beasts,
Chilly bins, cricket wins,
Fast skis, golf tees,
Silver ferns, kauri trees,
Kiwiburger, love one please.
Voice over:
McDonalds’ Kiwiburger, the classic New Zealand burger.
Cos we love
All Blacks, thermal daks,
Egg and cheese, walking tracks,
Beef pattie, marching girls,
Tomato, lettuce, paua shells,
Gumboots, ponga shoots,
Floppy hats and kiwifruits,
Beetroot, buzzy bees,
Moggy cats and cabbage trees,
Onions, kakapo's,
Kia oras, cheerios,
Jandals, sandals,
Ketchup, Coromandels,
Swanndris, butterflies,
Mustard, fishing flies,
Hokey-pokey, Maori haka,
Kiwiburger, that's our tucker...
244
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Meet the man big enough to run the country’s biggest home improvement stores.
Plus Mega’s buying power guarantees the best possible price every day.
Mitre 10 Mega.
Best range.
Lowest prices.
End of story.
245
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Brand: NZI
TVC title: Stealing your stuff (1:00)
Brand owner: IAG New Zealand Limited
Launch date: March 2006
Agency: Colenso
Creative Director: Richard Maddocks
Copywriter and Art Director: Kimberley Ragan & Rebecca Johnson-Pond
Production Company: Boing Productions
Director: Neil Goodridge
Voice: Oscar Kightley
Script:
246
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Script:
You were the first to say no when only men had the right to vote.
When the world said Everest couldn’t be conquered you said NO!
And when they said box office hits could only be made in Hollywood
I like that.
Tagline: No additives.
No preservatives
247
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Agency: Colenso
Creative Director: Richard Maddocks
Copywriter and Art Director: David Govier and Levi Slavin
Production Company: The Sweetshop
Director: James Pilkington
Producer: Fiona King.
Director of Photography: Aaron Morton.
Voice: Rob Brydon
Script:
248
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
(This song, based on the hit made famous in 1964 by Peter, Paul and Mary, is a combination
of spoken segments with vocal sound effects and singing)
Strap line:
The all new Corolla. Our favourite car.
Toyota. Moving forward.
249
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Script:
No no.
Gorgeous women.
Female Manager: Brucetta, you’re fired. And where’s your girlfriend Davena?
250
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Agency: Colenso
Lyrics:
Hello my friend
It's morning, time to wake now
Your body and mine entwined will have to break now
I want your flesh, your warmth to stay beside me
Oh, how I wish you could be deep inside me
Show me your eyes, your love, most tender feeling
And I'll give you mine, be truthful and revealing
'cause it's you that I love
and it's true that I love
It's love not given lightly
But I knew this was love
And it's you that I love
And it's more than what it might be
UK based Kiwi man: Well Mum sends me a loaf from home every month but my flatmates
always try and get into it when I’m not around. So I hide it down here. And I know they will
never look in here. I don’t do much cooking.
Heathrow Airport Inspector: You’d be surprised how many Kiwis try and bring a couple of
loaves of that Vogel’s bread through here. We confiscate most of them. Quite good bread
really.
New York based Kiwi man: Well one morning I’m sleeping right. She’s um burning my
Vogel’s. (Argument)
New York Woman: It was a year ago alright. Michael, let it go.
New York based Kiwi man: Well it’s really hard to get.
Tagline: Vogel’s. Bread for New Zealanders.
251
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Brand: Wattie’s
Agency: DDB
Script:
Saturday.
Footy
And a feed.
Wattie’s.
What else?
252
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
Brand: Weet-bix
Agency: Ogilvy
Script:
Yes. 3.44
253
APPENDIX 6 SCRIPTS AND PRODUCTION DETAILS FOR BRAND ADVERTISEMENTS
254
APPENDIX 7 RAW KEY THEME SUMMARIES OF AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL NARRATIVES
Ann Belinda
Small town life, family/kids focus, happy Hard work, middle class, fighting to pay
times & ‘get togethers’, mixing of people mortgage, getting on with life, able to do better
from all walks of life, no barriers, fitting in New Zealand than England. New Zealand is
in, many community volunteers, New a place to be happy. Hard life of pioneers.
Zealanders come from hard working
average settler families
Bringing up kids, supporting activities kids get
into, sports coaching / management, PTA, tuck
shop volunteering. Committee work for hobby
and catching up with other people through
shared arts and crafts interests
Unique in making connections, everyone No snobbery or levels of society compared to
knows somebody who knows somebody, England. Wealthier people not treated any
talk to anyone. Not daunted by meeting differently and don’t behave any differently.
high profile people, high powered people Status doesn’t make much difference in New
are not isolated from the communities Zealand. Self-made people who have worked
they came from or are part of hard are better people than born to wealth. They
appreciate the hard work required.
Tall poppies – ‘Even Stevens’, don’t want to
stand out, dislike ‘wannabes’. Some places with
simple old fashioned baches becoming quite
snobby with too many showy expensive homes
built by new rich who are taking over
Frequent comparisons with Australia; Not different from Australia apart from accent.
which place is better for different things Slightly different mix of immigrants in
– weather, accents, food, shopping Australian cities.
Know a lot about the rest of the world, Getting away from home, OE, travelling and
travelling, OE seeing most of the world (English villagers’
lives too routine & inward focused, nothing
changes), but realising New Zealand is better.
Doing Australia, Fiji, Australia, cruising in the
Pacific. Know a lot about the rest of the world
Well rounded people, not so specialised Friendly, always chatting, stick together, look
that don’t have a good overview of their out for each other overseas, hard work
field (whatever it is), everyone likes reputation, always get jobs, well trained, loved
Kiwis, good reputation, Kiwis like to by foreign employers
help
255
APPENDIX 7 RAW KEY THEME SUMMARIES OF AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL NARRATIVES
Ann Belinda
Long outdoor holidays every year, Childhood holidays every year, camping &
adventure lifestyle, camping every year, visiting little beach places, seeing the country,
rivers, beaches, boats swimming, boats, kayaking, diving, outdoors,
weekends on bush tracks, Taupo & snow. Nice
white sand beaches, clear water, big hills,
beautiful places, clean and fresh. Where else
could you see dolphins for free? Active outdoor
life – compared to English kids whose lives are
inside.
Sports orientated – watch many types of Watching sports important – sailing Americas
sport, arm chair experts, kids sport Cup, rugby. Rugby source of role models for
coaching, support national teams, boys – keeps them out of trouble
especially rugby
Drinking beer Typical kiwi men – they are different - like
beer, motorbikes / vehicles, loyal to each other
(and sports mad)
Laidback people, was a very safe place Slower pace of life than New York / USA but
but not so much now. Clean green, much more opportunities than England. New Zealand
scenic variety used to be behind the world in fashions,
shopping etc but not now. Auckland is more
rushed than relaxed life for more naive small
town New Zealanders. Relatively safe place.
Deep affection for kiwiana. Dave New Zealand symbolised by bungee, Dave
Dobbyn, LOTR, Footrot Flats, John Dobbyn
Rowles, the haka, kiwi birds
Increasing awareness of things Maori,
more use of language, more emphasis on
New Zealand and Maori issues at school
today, obvious racism amongst older
New Zealanders who resent the way
things are going. Tourists don’t detect
racial problems
Loss of identity due to immigrants that
don’t try to integrate; community values
being diluted by newcomers who don’t
fit in, don’t speak English and don’t hold
same sorts of values (e.g. helping
community fund raising & appreciation
for the importance of outdoor education)
Growing up in New Zealand - more
opportunities for excellence in any field,
chance to shine, give it a go, no barriers,
feature of small country
256
APPENDIX 7 RAW KEY THEME SUMMARIES OF AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL NARRATIVES
Ann Belinda
DIY, no8 mentality, ingenuity, great
inventions & ideas, ahead of the rest of
the world
Tolerant society generally. Older New
Zealanders unsettled by gays
Special connections – West Auckland,
Waitakere, Cascades, Omaha, farms in Thames
& Whakatane – pioneering connections and
childhood places. Knowing many prominent
local families through school and family
friendships. Mixing with Maori, Pacific
Islanders, Dutch and Dalmatians – getting on
OK with everyone. Outrageous Fortune –
honestly say you went to school with ½ of
them. Recognise the local gang problems, P
problems, and families not doing so well as
being part of the West Auckland scene.
Sense of humour Sense of humour
There’s not a big emphasis on academic Some very intelligent people in New Zealand
achievement but we emphasise sport. Can’t see beyond
rugby to singers, artists, academics. Other
achievements not well recognised.
Male dominated society
257
APPENDIX 7 RAW KEY THEME SUMMARIES OF AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL NARRATIVES
Cathy Donna
Everyone integrated. Maori culture club groups, Different cultures in one place
Maori words, kapa haka part of the routine in together. Part of living here – adapted
forestry villages. No segregation. Maoris not to living together. Get along well.
treated like Abos in Australia or in South Africa. Worship at home privately but we do
Not like American Indians who got put on well together. Doesn’t matter about
reservations. Not ashamed of Maori. Get on with the colour of your skin or your accent
each other. Treaty of Waitangi. as long as you have the same
techniques (job skills) and can
communicate.
Overseas people know about the country (scenery)
from Lord of the Rings trilogy. New Zealand
misunderstood – people still think there are
Maoris “the indigenous people” wearing flax
skirts. Living in villages, pas and maraes, eating
eels. See a black and white division. Don’t realise
we all just live together.
Make do – Forestry used to put on Christmas New Zealand used to be different. No
parties, put down a hangi. Eeling. Wild pig and fences. Community – men at the pub
venison. Wild honey. Vege garden. Sharing, barter together and ladies playing darts,
and swap. Hand me downs. Fundraising with having a sherry. Kids in the
parents. Chores and make your own fun. Kids in neighbourhood all together. Called
village play together. Bullrush. Forts. Collecting everyone Aunty and Uncle. Talk to
frogs. Collecting pine cones. anyone. Help and build. Need a lift,
need a hand. Dad and uncles would be
there and helping out. Everyone
pitches in.
Living off the land. Looking after kumara and Living off the land – free. Kina, crabs.
potatoes and harvesting / storing. Older generation Rod and nets.
had knowledge of ferns, roots, vegetables.
Fishing, growing own food, shooting. Younger
generation not interested.
Kiwis are a little bit more independent. We make
our kids more independent. Not as sheltered.
Outdoors. Jet boats. Water skiing. Lots of things
are accessible. Put on shoes and go to the park.
Access to beaches. Always near the edges of the Travelling – Dad worked for Air New
sea. Beautiful. Hop skip and a jump to beach. Zealand so got some perks. Trip to
Christmas / New Year go up north. Go camping – Disneyland.
throw the sleeping bag in the car. Take tents. Eat
communally. Bonfires on the beach. Volleyball.
Kids swim all day. Eat, smoke, drink, be lazy.
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APPENDIX 7 RAW KEY THEME SUMMARIES OF AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL NARRATIVES
Cathy Donna
See the country. Went all over New Zealand in Driving around – getting in the car and
school holidays – 3 weeks here and 3 weeks there. just driving. Seeing a bit of the
Pack up caravan or campsites. School trips. country. Beautiful New Zealand
Festivals. New Zealanders feel linked to places (scenery). High school trip to see
like Rotorua, (the mud pools, and Maori culture), South Island. Otahuhu to Queenstown.
tourismy / brochure kind of places Queenstown, See heaps of things that you don’t
Arrowtown, Milford Sound / track. forget. Going to a lot of places in the
school holidays - Hastings, Taupo
Bay, Whangamata. Jumping in the car
on State Highway 1 – ending up in
Christchurch. Parents taking off in the
camper van – did the South Island
thing.
Kiwis travel a bit more. Nearly every Kiwi does Tried to have a go at living in
OE after getting first qualification. Shoot over to Australia – followed the boy to
Aussie – see family, shopping trips, shows like Aussie.
Phantom. Holiday in Thailand. Planned to go on
OE to India then overland by bus to England.
Parents encourage kids to do OE. See the world,
find their own feet. There is a lot more out there –
in New Zealand there is not the wider variety of
opportunities and jobs. Go and do a gap year.
Most people go to England – you can jump over to Get away from Auckland every
Europe and do tiki touring. Most people have Christmas New Year – into the wops.
British ancestry. Having British parents / No mobile coverage, no flush toilet,
grandparents makes it easy access. lucky to have extension cord (with
power). Just us, the beach and 4 days
of nothing. All of us together. Totally
happy there. Go for a swim. Freedom
from responsibility.
Special places are home. Where the people are. Special places – Whananaki – family
Taupo where grandparents were. Friend is land.
connected to East Coast where her whanau are.
New generation does not have that affiliation to
places.
Tough mental attitude. Families had it hard. Dad Dad is typical New Zealand man - is
always at work to earn a penny – work his way up. inventive and likes to do things for
Too busy to do things / share with kids. Mum himself. Building projects – fences,
didn’t work and did more things. Home baking, extensions on the house.
sewing, looking after lots of kids. Great
grandparents have always been working on the
land, forestry and timber mill in King Country.
Granddad didn’t talk about the war. Got on with
getting on.
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Can do attitude. Give it a go attitude. Bungee, Dad is lots of fun for his kids. Kids
waka ama. What’s the worst? Somebody says no. can jump on him. Picks them up from
Who cares? She’ll be right attitude. Outrageous school.
Fortune - ‘Fuck me’ attitude – get over yourself.
Come on, get on with it. Not making it worse than
it is. It’ll be alright tomorrow.
Kiwi bloke – stubbies and beer swilling Kiwi bloke is supposed to look like
stereotype. Actually loves his sport, loves a cold Fred Dagg. Never come across this
beer. Pretty down to earth and grounded. Not very fullah. Good Kiwi bloke has gone.
polished. Always fished and gone to watch rugby
in the weekend, then go to the social club
afterwards. Hands on. Fix it attitude (then admit
you can’t do it and have to go and buy). “Blokes’
bloke” – didn’t show feelings or have heart-felt
talks with kids.
Sports / All Blacks. Everyone is encouraged to Like sport especially rugby and rugby
play netball or rugby at school. Interschool league and watching good athletes
competitions. Rugby is ingrained. Everyone playing properly, even if you’re not a
knows the All Blacks and the Sevens. Trouping sporty person yourself. Netball is a big
around to watch teams, sausage sizzles, club thing. Swimming. Whole family is big
rooms afterwards. Everyone wants to get into first into rugby league. Brother-in-law
XV or top netball team. Part & parcel of life. played for Kiwis and premiers of local
Everyone gets an opportunity. and Aussie teams.
National pride. When the All Blacks do the haka. Work hard, play hard.
Proud to have ‘Made in New Zealand’ and kiwi
tattoo.
Closeness and ability to stay together. Keep in Family occasions – way of getting us
touch with family. Lots of family do’s. Big thing together. Eating pork bones and
going to Auntie’s for Christmas. Farmed out to drinking kava together. Nothing beats
stay with family in the school holidays. Special your Mum’s roast dinner. Big
memories of happy times with grandparents. Christmas dinner – lots of people
Outrageous Fortune - family protecting each joining in – not just blood family. Life
other. ‘Go on and help your brother – sort it out’ rotates around looking after family.
Can’t say no. Taking on a lot of
responsibility. Closely connected to
parents and parents-in-law. Some New
Zealanders are not like this. See
families with parents in nursing home
– their lives are set for themselves
somewhere else.
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Cathy Donna
Small country thing. Mention a person - Who you know can be important – you
somebody, knows somebody. Know people who tell your boss “I’ve got a mate needs a
were All Blacks. You are associated with all kinds job”
of people – his side of the family is connected to...
Person you associate with went to school with ...
or is married to .....
No snobbery. Down to earth, grounded people. There are different classes – it’s
Upbringing and history means that millionaires subtle. Turn up in big cars to pick up
can switch from talking about the cat next door to kids. See it at netball with parish
the economy in Japan. In New Zealand anyone church family groups. Goes into the
can do a job (no barriers of class and ethnic playground.
group). In Aussie people were snobby – looked
down on people. Definite divisions of who (ethnic
group / class) does what job.
Compared to New Zealand, Australia is Home is a house on a piece of land.
unfriendly. Fast paced. Brick buildings,
motorways everywhere. Racial/ethnic divisions.
People joined clubs in their own little divisions.
Didn’t mix.
New Zealanders were all the same – same things
for all. Now groups like Asian, Somalian and
Indian – have their own churches, groups and
societies.
Aussies hate Kiwis. Put down continuously – to
your face. Ask you to say ‘fish’
Once Were Warriors- getting beaten is a reflection Life wasn’t all roses. Some tough
of what does happen in a lot of communities - family situations.
very ‘Kiwi-ish’. Movies tend to show New
Zealand is like the poor relations – not top billing
material. Portrayed as poor nation / people.
Kiwis and moas, sports teams - All Blacks and Symbols - Maori bone carving. Maori
Black sticks – iconic to New Zealand designs like koru epitomise New
Zealand – a bit of home. Paua.
Greenstone – this is New Zealand.
Native birds (kiwi but also other birds
too), kauri tree.
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Cathy Donna
Always a party and drinking a big
thing as a teenager. An important part
of life – social club. Going to the pub.
Used to go after work to the local –
hanging out with the Black Power
gangsters. Rough but safe. Nowadays
people can’t handle being pissed.
Getting drunk to fight.
Fitting in at school was important.
Don’t want to stand out. Being tallest
& biggest sometimes feels like an
outcast.
Want kids to be safe – go to a safe
school. Petrified for kids’ future.
Violence.
Learning about God is not a bad thing.
Don’t necessarily want to go to church
every Sunday.
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Elaine Fiona
Importance of weekends to spend with family and Socialising – being surrounded by
friends extended family and friends
New Zealanders have pride in country – love Strong sense of national pride. Want to
travelling to the beautiful places – just when you be good ambassadors for our country –
thought it couldn’t get any better there is another to be able to say we have seen our
amazing place. Weather is good. Huge variety of country. Fiercely nationalistic.
scenery – mountains, gorges, sounds, glaciers, Australia – we’re the little guy. Don’t
wild coasts, geothermal, islands. forget us. We belong here. Revere the
achievements of our country –
ANZAC Day.
Gorgeous, wild, natural beaches, free for all, free Beautiful country; physical beauty.
parking, no need for shops selling tat and Clean green. Outdoors place. See
enhancements like fairground rides etc. God given whales and dolphins. Extra dimension
right to go there. Live in paradise of Maori. Relative safety.
Xmas camping with 8 or 9 families. Holidays Weekends and holidays at the beach
tenting. Digging for pipi and cockles. Everyone house. Hit the road. New Zealand
sitting around the fire. camping holiday tradition. Communal
living. Carefree. Back to basics.
Freedom from usual routine. Rough it.
Walking on the beach, fishing,
swimming, relaxing. Simple pleasures
– reading, playing cards, bonfires.
Passion for the outdoors.
Freedom in New Zealand. Kids with bare feet, Memories of community being a safe
clean open environment. We utilise the outdoors place for kids to be in
(beaches etc) not just backyard. Childhood
memories of roaming around unsupervised with
neighbourhood kids.
Overseas travel, OE, little country in the big wide Travelling especially OE is classic
world, down under, such a long way away. Life pattern. Tiki-touring. Life is not
altering. Must see the big wide world. So much complete until you have discovered
history in other countries. Experience things that the rest of the world. Do it on your
can’t be gained in classroom. Cram in experiences own. Interested in overseas visitors –
- make every moment of overseas travel count. their stories and the way they live.
Travelling on a shoestring but richness of Partly motivated by wanting to
experiences gained. Living life to its fullest. discover own roots and reconnecting
Always plan on coming home. with ancestral places. Need to know
WHO we are. Sense of being isolated
from the rest of the world. Send
reminders of home to people on OE.
Make sure they don’t forget to come
home.
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Kiwi fathers more hands on, involved with kids Men – quite blokey, outdoors. Not
and family than English fathers soft. Hunter / gatherers. Independent
souls. Pioneering heritage of cutting
new ground for yourself and your
family.
No 8 wire tradition, ingenuity, fix anything, do Resourcefulness. No 8. Resilience.
anything, make anything. She’ll be right Roundedness – sports, community,
social, educational, part-time work.
Independence, self-sufficiency.
Not frightened of risks. Not focused on personal / Get in - boots and all. Be in there
individual rights, not into blaming and suing. doing. Adventurous. Try new stuff.
Accidents happen. Learn from risk assessments, Not frightened of challenges.
preparation and experiences. Taking responsibility
for self.
Heroes are sports people – esp. rugby and Sporting prowess – despite relative
netballers who become role models lack of funding and advantages per
capita.
Sport plays a big part in family life.
Parents and kids play, and go on to
coach and manage teams. Value of
sport - running around for kids sport.
Some cultures in New Zealand feel hard done by Maori / spirituality sets us apart from
and wronged, owed something. Need to get on Australia. Defines us. Respect for
with it. Rise above it. Let it be the past. Maori without the arrogance of a
colonising power. Accepting of other
people. Coming to terms with
identities, business of being Maori.
Isolation.
Visual imagery that finally captures our Symbols: haka, Maori symbols, koru,
uniqueness. Kiwiana. All things Maori culture. fish hook, silver fern, New Zealand
Tomato sauce bottle, paua, vegemite, L&P, buzzy anthem, Marmite, kiwifruit, lamb,
bee, flax kete, silver fern, koru, pohutukawa, poi, BBQ, kiwi
stories with pukeko and kiwi birds and Vogel’s
bread. Unique flora and fauna.
Once Were Warriors – too hard to cope with Quirky movies. Dark themes and
content. Visually strong. Dealing with
issues outside our personal experience.
Strong voices in New Zealand
literature: Witi Ihimaera; Patricia
Grace; Janet Frame; Maurice Gee.
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Volunteering, fundraising. Sense of
responsibility to be involved -
participate and help. Generous.
Telethon thing. Getting behind a cause
however small or, it might be. Kiwis
are good at rallying to a situation
Understated, humble
Committed to / grounded in local
community. Belonging. Attachment to
place. Concern when isolated and
away from community. Beach place is
a second important community to be
part of.
Classless society. Not pigeonholed, open, Classless society. Don’t like tall
welcoming, accepting, not so judgemental of poppies. Very much pitch ourselves as
status, income, way of speaking, walks of life, equals. Knock down the people that
background. Take me or leave me. Everyone just stand too tall.
gets on. Are who we are. But differences do exist
between cultural groups in New Zealand
Relaxed, casual, drop in for a coffee and a chat,
invite people home, talk to complete strangers,
laid back
Focus on gaining experiences more than material
things.
Hold our own. Stubborn. Punch above
our weight. Not to be taken over or
browbeaten. Nuclear free – putting a
foot in the sand - not going to be
pushed around. Rainbow Warrior. Not
afraid to be one of the little guys.
Force to be reckoned with.
Humour - sort of tongue in cheek, having a bit of Quirky sense of humour.
an understanding of how we are often portrayed
Kiwis are really interested in what
people think about New Zealand
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Georgina Helen
High quality outdoor lifestyle. Safe, outdoors Outdoorsy lifestyle is important.
focused living environment. Slightly slower
pace of life. Ethos of family work life
balance. Not so difficult to finance good
lifestyle in New Zealand. Life is grounded in
the outdoors world.
Free from formality, impromptu, popping in
unannounced, socialise, everybody welcome,
the more the merrier, coffee & chat. Flexible,
not too rigid, everyone helps - share out the
jobs. Adaptable. Adjustable. Casual – just
rock up.
Children take up our time and dictate the
scope of our social life
Encourage gaining range of experiences Everyone does the big OE. Would like to
especially OE. Like to challenge ourselves. live in Sydney for a while to give the family
Test how you cope under tough conditions. new experiences.
Find out who we are. Blow off steam. Find
out what you want to do. Adventurous – see
where things take you - risk-taking. Learning
experiences. Seek uncertainty. Character
building.
Explore other parts of world. Gain as much We are so far away from most of the world.
worldly knowledge as possible New Zealand used to be removed and
limited (especially for shopping) but much
less so now. Visiting other parts of the world
is an eye-opener – prepare yourself for big
differences overseas. Go for a long time and
make it worthwhile.
Hard workers; integrity, less extroverted than Cruisy, ‘good life’ attitude. Todays’ people
Americans. Reliable – true to their word - do have got it easy. Not as hard working or as
what they say (goes for all Antipodeans). committed to responsibilities. Not much
Don’t over-inflate ourselves – reserve based pressure or competition - things come too
on English heritage. Tall poppy syndrome – easy so people don’t push themselves.
don’t like to say how fantastic we are. Get on
with the job and don’t worry about playing
political games (let the results speak for
themselves). Can be tight (careful or miserly
money-wise).
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Georgina Helen
Rugged individuals from hard upbringings Background of tough conditions and
and settler families with real struggles and struggles for settlers. Leaving school to help
experiences of loss. Hard country for pioneers in the family business.
to get their teeth into. Achievement the result
of buckling down and earning a living the best
way you can. Blood and guts. Toil. Hardship.
Underdog philosophy
Typical kiwi loves outdoors and sun, rugby,
racing and beer. Cool bloke is reserved –
expresses himself differently to Croatian.
Prefers some space – being alone
sometimes.
New Zealand families not as deeply bonded
as Croatians. Degree of aloofness / reserve
and less reliance on each other. New
Zealanders more independent from each
other within the family. New Zealanders not
very affectionate huggy / kissy. Would find
Croatian family oppressive and
overwhelming. Fewer family duties and
expectations for Kiwis than Croatians.
Many things in common with others –
nationality is irrelevant - reflection after
experiencing 9/11 and visiting Gallipoli
Maori culture and importance of whanau –
extended families sticking together and
helping each other, working in small family
businesses. Same concept in some
immigrant groups – Croatian, Chinese and
Indian families
Deep set part of the culture is the link with the
land. Always want to live on a farm. Get
hands dirty. Honourable existence.
Respectable to work the land.
Beautiful places, seeing the country. Going Seeing New Zealand is a priority for all. So
tramping / camping with friends every year. many beautiful places to be proud of. Sandy
Beach-life – variety and quantity of beaches. beaches (not stones / pebbles)
Trees, rock pools, pipis, headlands. Free to
everybody. Close and easy access to most
people. (Back to basics) compensation -
opportunity to balance out busier / city part of
life.
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Georgina Helen
Beach and bach life is a great leveller. Mix Boating major part of life. Sun, out on the
with other generations of the family; people water, Xmas holidays, exploring, at the
from other towns and lifestyles. Mixing with bach, playing in the water, take the fizz boat
all sorts of people. Don’t define ourselves into out, creating childhood and family
classes. Happy to have lots of friendships / memories, keeping the family together,
relationships – not exclusive set. having your friends join you at the beach / or
boating
Symbols – New Zealand lamb on barbie, lolly Symbols – koru, Dave Dobbyn, BBQ
scramble, gumboot tossing, Marmite, 4
Square, Longest drink in town giraffe, meat
pies, stubbies and jandals, Adidas track pants,
baggy t-shirts. Welcome Home – Dave
Dobbyn – images of traditional Kiwi life.
Fame comes from international renown & Heroes are sports people who are often in
acclaim. Dave Dobbyn, Kiri Te Kanawa, the media – All Blacks. Sir Ed, Susan
Janet Frame, Helen Clark (can’t see it) Devoy, Dame Kiri
Like to see ourselves as humble like Ed
Hillary and sanguine - She’ll be right mate –
Fred Dagg. Dave Dobbyn – hasn’t forgotten
where he came from even though he’s
famous.
Fanatically sporty – huge into rugby & Men and women mad about rugby. Almost a
cricket. religion – social life sometimes fits around
important sporting fixtures. Getting up at 2
am. Major events that everyone talks about.
Ultimate aim to be AB.
New Zealanders perform way outside where For a small country we do really well in
they should be – small country but we sports, because of (or in spite of?) being
outshine everyone in odd moments. Mental removed from / not having easy access to
hardness. Refuse to be beaten. Defy the odds. many major sporting competitions. Team
Fired up. Pride and dogged determination. sport success comes from inclusion of tough
Maoris and Pacific Islanders. Also, starting
children at an early age in teams with ABs
as predominant role models gives New
Zealand rugby an advantage.
Team sport important for children – life Sport is good for kids.
lessons of interacting with other people,
taking knocks, not being sheltered from life’s
hardships
Fitting in – foreigners pinpointed and made to Fitting in is important.
feel that fitting in is essential and desirable.
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Georgina Helen
Family violence and abuse now often
associated with Maori
Link to special places – Bay of Islands,
Kawau Is, Waiheke
Used to be a very safe place but not now.
A lovely sense of humour, laughing at We can laugh at ourselves.
ourselves. A huge part of our psyche is that
we don’t take ourselves too seriously.
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Ingrid Jackie
Grew up in the country. Lived in small Sense of connection to a farm or a piece of
country towns. Doing farming stuff – riding Kiwi land. People talk of going down to the
horses, having pet calves. Tiny country farm. Images of NZ – expect sheep and
schools. Not much TV watching. Go outside. farmland. More of a myth. My friends did
Grandparents were all farmers. Lots of not have farms but seemed as if they did.
cousins on farms too. Growing up and staying Husband has strong sense of connection to
on their farms. Didn’t know a lot of people in Manawatu. Own sense of connection to
the city. Wellington – hills and harbour – good
childhood experiences but not archetypal
connection.
Born in South Africa, to German born
Jewish parents. Family came to NZ (aged 8)
on transfer for set amount of time. Stayed
ever since. Parents returned to Germany
permanently. Lived in a part of Wellington.
Lot of families lived there for quite a few
generations. Closed community in some
ways. Lot of the teachers hadn’t been
overseas or travelled.
Coming from out of town (to Auckland),
people had all these stories about Auckland
which didn’t turn out to be particularly true.
Most people we met seemed to come from
other parts of New Zealand. Lots of people
from small towns.
Homes may be very different but school is
where children get to share and have
common New Zealand experiences. Classic
shared experience for people in my age
group - little milk bottles. Swimming lessons
in the sea. Rock pool studies. Manual
training.
Images of the 60s and 70s. Memories of
what people wore (stubbies), stories and
pictures in the School Journal - not
necessarily personal memories or direct
experiences but I relate to them –
recognisable stories that are shared. Living
in NZ means I do not have such shared
things in Germany.
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Into sport - took up rowing. Wanted to play
sport / hockey but couldn’t living so far from
school. Son plays water polo. Really
important thing for kids to do / be involved in
even if they’re not great at it. Good social
skills and good from health perspective.
ANZAC day services – went as Girl Guide.
People are now taking their children to dawn
parades. Something they want to say they
have done. Linking a turning point in NZ
history, a consciousness – we are something
– with stories around their father/
grandfather etc.
National fixation with what happens to the All
Blacks. Some people get quite tied up with the
win / lose thing. Only one in the family to get
up and watch the All Blacks at 2am. John
Walker winning gold medal. Proud and
emotional.
Curiosity. Grew up with love of England. My generation have a link, still connected
Fascination of wanting to see where back to England. Incredibly excited to visit.
grandfather came from. Intense desire to see Schooling with Anglo focus - English
where other people lived and to travel. history, novels, literature. Mother also felt
very connected to England. Some
similarities between South Africa and NZ
colonial experiences. Son’s generation
influenced by American culture – music and
films.
New Zealand was really isolated in the 1960
/ 70s. Uncommon going to Germany every 2
years. Sense of being able to go outside and
come back – a much larger world. Sense of
things that were both different and the same.
Father travelled overseas and had lots of
overseas visitors. Import restrictions /
overseas funds. Being able to access
different things in the household. Christmas
rituals & German traditions – unlike others.
Christmas Eve and St Nicholas.
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Ingrid Jackie
Wanted to see New Zealand before I went to Mother determined to see as much of New
England. Milford Track. Lots of trips around Zealand as possible, seeing different parts of
the country. It’s fantastic; especially New Zealand. Farm holidays in the South
appreciate New Zealand more since lived Island. Other people might go camping –
overseas. camping grounds / holiday parks, to a bach
or to see family – possibly going to one
place. Going to the South Island was seen as
a big thing in the 60s / 70s.
City seemed amazing. Driving in Auckland
was terrifying – traffic lights.
Country is very green, outdoorsy. Love New Zealandness: Rotorua – Maori, geyser,
tramping and hiking. Lots of stunning hot pools; Queenstown (represents the South
scenery. Not too many people. Love Raglan – Island) – lakes and mountains, skiing. All of
beautiful coast, wilderness, windswept. South Island is extremely beautiful. Ruapehu
Coromandel. Nelson. Wellington and / Desert Road. Coromandel for the beaches
Auckland – amazing little corners that we and bush.
haven’t explored.
Going to the beach in the summer. December Husband is not a beach person. More a river
– always feels like it’s time to go to the beach person.
for a couple of months. Lived in the
Coromandel so beach literally just down the
road. Rowing dinghies, waterskiing. Playing
in the river. Not keen on diving or going out
to sea. Water so clear. We are spoilt; get fussy
about swimming in water where you can see
your feet. Couldn’t believe woman in Maine
had never been to the beach. They lived miles
from any coast. New Jersey Shore – grey
murky - yuk. Grandparents now live at the
beach.
Typical Kiwi backpacker experience to All close friends and husband did OE –
Europe. Got to England with no idea of what I England and back packing. Going overseas –
was going to do. Met by cousin who lived in rite of passage. Doing some scummy job
London. Travelled England and Scotland. with it. I did it here in a different way.
Backpacked through Europe for 2 years.
Home to New Zealand with absolutely no
money left. Travelling again – car across
USA.
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Ingrid Jackie
English class system – very different to NZ. Non-hierarchical. There are class & other
Coming from NZ – had no concept of what it divisions but NZ has more mixing. Possible
was going to be like. Posh family in little to go across from one divide to another. Not
village. Left me with their daughter while in Germany or South Africa. Mixed families
they went off to Europe. with different racial and cultural mixes. We
have Maori and Cook Islanders in extended
family.
Very adaptable. Can slot into different Turn his hand to anything. Uni student son
situations. Can cope with things. I can do it. has got himself on the rubbish trucks.
Experience of living & working in USA. Worked on building sites. Husband’s
Everything happens at once. Brave. Cut all generation (men) working in summer jobs at
support networks of people I knew with kids. the railways or the freezing works.
Quite stressful. (New experiences) school bus.
Couple of Massey papers – keeping myself
busy. Getting out to explore on my own. Trips
to Europe and travelling around North East
USA.
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Different world view to Americans. Being an Rites of passage: drinking. OK when you’re
outsider at the time of Sept 11. Americans growing up to get drunk. Student days.
couldn’t believe that anyone would not like Going flatting. Going overseas.
them. Weird. Couldn’t quite feel it as they
did. Putting flags in the window.
Importance of neighbourhood lifestyle – Buying your own house. Doing up your
walking to school. Know most of the people house is hugely NZ activity. Open friendly
in the street. Seeing people about that you people. In contrast to different impression
know and who know your name and who you you get from NZ films – quite dark
are. Like the familiarity of areas of Auckland, undertones, warped.
where friends and family live. Smallness;
being in a little country is good. Connections
– 3 degrees of separation. Familiarity thing.
Meeting somebody – you know somebody
that knows them. DIY
Lots of opportunities (for kids) to do different
things. Try things quite easily. Great for them.
In America they would not have those
chances through schools.
Busy life juggling – working nights and shifts.
Raising kids. Keep an eye on them. Being
around for the kids. Work, family, kindy,
school, part time job – everything else. Kids
activities – especially sport takes a lot of time.
Importance of family – take the children on a
tour to visit all of their cousins.
Work ethic. Determined. Integrity, Honesty. Not soft. Able to cope with the rougher
things. Go out tramping. Make do.
Individualistic. Independent in the way they
present themselves. Not cookie cutter types of
people. Not having to conform to anyone’s
expectation of how they should look or be.
Free thinking.
Laconic, laid back. It’ll be right. Not really Casual. Outrageous Fortune - not holding
concerned what other people think. Just get on authority in high regard. Just do our own
quietly and get stuck into it. I think if the ABs thing, skirt around authority if we possibly
win / lose it’s not the end of the earth. Not as can. Respect is not given – have to earn it.
risk averse as Americans.
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Ingrid Jackie
New Zealander relationships with Maori in
1960s – actually quite separate in the way
people related to each other. Sense of saying
one thing and doing another. Where I grew
up there were no Maori. I was pretty much
the only person at secondary school from
Europe. Pommy bashing times. Surprised to
find Greek and Italian communities in
Wellington. Come from anywhere else, very
hidden.
Very accepting of others – in Auckland used New Zealand is multi-cultural now. Some
to all sorts of cultures and different walks of people put emphasis on bi-culturalism. In
life. In the workplace / hospital and for kids at the last 20 years – influx of people from
school. Did not really have much to do with Europe, South Africa etc. Different races -
Maori during school days. Not many living in reflected in Outrageous Fortune.
my community then. Recognisable Auckland figures in Bro
Town.
Tall poppy. Sameness and fitting in is
important. Pressure to be the same.
Difference was not dealt with very well at
school. New Zealanders not very
comfortable with direct debate about
different viewpoints / politics. Take things
personally. Difficult for dissenting voices to
survive. Tend not to see difference easily.
Generalists – in the US people tend to be
micro-specialised, expert. New Zealanders
tend to have more overview on things. Do
several things at once.
Self-deprecating. We don’t mind if we knock
ourselves. Sense of humour. Sarcasm. To
mock someone is not considered to be an
insult especially if we know them. Not the
case in America. – have to be careful not to
offend or insult. But similar sense of humour
to Australia.
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Self-effacing. Mild mannered. Americans Modest. Downplay. Not boast hugely.
very up front in a way we are not. Not “out
there” (look at me; look what I can do). Quiet.
Quietly spoken. Assertive without being loud
and dramatic about it. Determined in a non
confrontational way. Prominent Kiwi women
like Helen Clark are a great example of this.
Doesn’t care what other people think about
her.
Australians – we are a little bit like them but Australians – see ourselves as being really
they are more like Americans. Bit more out different. Better. They’re more brash and
there. New Zealanders and Australians always louder. Go to Australia and so much is the
like to mock one another. same and a lot in common. But stories are
quite different, different concerns and
relationship with indigenous people is very
different. Stories and understandings don’t
match at all.
Inventiveness. Like places with an arty vibe. No 8 wire. Being able to go out and make do
Almost hippy thing. People making things, with what there is there. Quite inventive.
cafes.
Quite generous people. Ready to help others if needed. Respond
pretty well and pull together in a disaster or
a crisis. Sense of that’s what you ought to
do. Quite righteous attitude.
Symbols: accents, NZ flag, distinctive Symbols: certain bird songs, things Maori or
clothing and luggage, rugby jersey, All Blacks Polynesian. Tiki. Pokarekare Ana. Fred
gear. Koru / Air New Zealand logo. Silver Dagg. Songs like Dominion Rd; Tim Finn,
ferns. Kiwi. Tiki. Woollen clothing. Swandri. Dave Dobbyn – song for the Americas Cup
Maori symbols are really strong now. (Loyal). Silver fern. Koru.
Stereotypes. Farmer- in gumboots and Stereotypes today – great range. Wanking
Swandri like we see on TV. Sporting type. Aucklander –money oriented. Wellingtonian
– civil servant. Kiwi bloke - only interested
in rugby; unable to have any feelings. NZ
woman – unsexy, driven, career person.
Farming types. Westie – dark clothing, dope,
pretty scummy lot portrayed on Outrageous
Fortune. PC Brigade; Greenies; South
Aucklanders – only poor, only uneducated,
only brown; Asian nerd. 30 years ago there
was a smaller set of New Zealand
stereotypes –New Zealander was somehow
more defined. Now broader and more
comprehensive.
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Not clear on identity. Lived most of life here
but do not have New Zealand passport. Not
seen as German by Germans. Don’t want
South African identity. Unremarkable
anglicised name. OK to be described as
Pakeha –‘not Maori’. Easily say I’m an
Aucklander. Geographically, Auckland is
quite ‘out’ but Wellington introspective,
harbour is quite enclosed. Notice that
Wellington is fairly white.
Mateship
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Karen Lana
Rural atmosphere. Farming family. NZers We are a kind of country people. Real
come across as a little unsophisticated. people. Down to earth people. Had
everything we needed but not extravagant.
Grew up on a farm – quite typical of NZ to
be country kids. Walk to local school. Calf-
club day. Raised with lots of animals around
– cats and dogs – neat Kiwi thing.
Hard working. Good work ethic. Value Hard workers. Family worked hard. Busy
having to work to make something of life. Dad dairy farmer and market gardener.
yourself. Dad had clear vision of taking over Mum milked, raised kids, cooked & baked
farm one day. Mum pretty busy with 4 kids. for family and workers. Tied to the farm.
Great sewer, baker, chef, loved gardening, did Older generations of husband’s family had
bible in schools. Cooking for shearers. As a basic upbringing – lots of kids and not a lot
teenager - working as a rousie & in of food. Admire people who have genuinely
horticulture research. Give it a go. See what I worked hard for what they’ve got and
can do. Like to make a difference. achieved something amazing.
Practical farming girl. Like commercial Real Do-it-yourselfer. If I can do it myself
element of research. Useful information to I’ll do it. His father was a builder. Very
help Royal Gala growers in Canterbury. good at doing anything. Worked on the
house. Very handy, learned along the way.
Planned renovations together. Best friend
did the building with help from both fathers.
Built the deck together – sanding and
painting. Set up own little business based on
making and selling decorator items.
(Adaptable and flexible) - get in and do it –
whatever needs to be done at work.
No class system. Don’t have English class Out in the shed - Husband couldn’t be
system of our ancestors. All on an equal without his space. Cupboards full of stuff
footing. I wouldn’t like to see class structure and tools.
development in NZ. Private school might tend
towards that. Not a Kiwi trait. No
pretentiousness. Living out of a backpack.
Giving kiwifruit toffees to famous hosts.
That’s the Kiwi way.
Laidback. Just do it – not too hooked up on Quite hardcase men. Get away with being
issues. Put up with more things in the work cheeky.
place. Go the extra mile. Not very aggressive.
She’ll be right. Don’t like conflict. Get
alongside. Peacekeepers. Attitude – rather not
fight.
Kiwi blokes are mischievous, cheeky, push the Creative thinkers. Quite inventive.
boundaries a little
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Ancestors – a big mixing pot. German, Very multi-cultural family circle with
Scottish, Swedish and English. Changing your husband’s Thai, Maori and Yugoslavian
surname - didn’t want any link to Germany. connections. Has not learned Thai or Maori
language. Father-in-law does carvings and
right into his culture. Not many mixed
cultures when I was a kid. Today all together
at Christmas. Japanese and USA in-laws.
Being brought up with Maori. Knowing that
whole cultural sensitivity. Taking an interest
in American Indians that we worked with.
(Contrast in USA) no one had taken an
interest in them.
Real sense of community and of family. Family is important to us. Being at home for
Family gathering and celebrations. Friends of the kids after school like Mum was. Quite
our brothers and sisters. All playing together. good family values. Grandparents lived and
Gran visited the flat – doing ironing, baking farmed in the same district. Family lives
and make the dinner. Grandparents played a close by. Local. Family history interest and
very big role in our lives. Summer holidays reunion.
with them – once went caravanning with
them. Take our friends too. Holidays with all
my cousins. Gran was proud of us and lived
through grandkids.
Involved in kindy. Plunket. Nominated onto Grandfather went to the war. Never talked
school BOT. Elected as chairperson. Edible about it except one time. Medal from the
garden at school. Pope for service in Italy. Served at Monte
Cassino.
Sports is a big part of our weekend. Soccer is Playing sports, or kids playing sports –
the most popular sport not rugby. Encouraged people get involved. Netball, hockey, rugby,
to play sport. Put sports people up on a running. Managing daughter’s netball team.
pedestal. Rugby is glorified. Hard core rugby Grandfather served as official for
following probably diminishing a bit. Commonwealth Games shooting. Dad is a
Netballers are doing better than rugby. World mental rugby fan. He watches rugby, golf
leaders in other sports but nobody knows. and American football on TV. Might watch
All Blacks on special occasions but this is
atypical of NZ norms. We love our sport –
love rugby – we’re a sporting nation. We’re
such a small country - sports people who do
well and excel are admired.
Independence – got on and saved up money.
Didn’t ask to be bailed out. Character
building.
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Karen Lana
Modest. Ed Hillary. Kiwis give themselves a Humble. Not pushy. Ambitious but not
hard time. Don’t gloat. Take your hand off it. overly so. Like to know what I’m talking
Don’t have that competitive, must win at all about. Don’t pretend I was anything bigger.
costs drive. Reason why we don’t’ do as well
as Australia in sports. Not as confident as
Australians. We praise more than our parents.
Hoping it will (keep) changing. Love talking
about your wins if you’re a kid.
Friendly & honest. Friendly, open type of people.
Americans are your best friends while you’re NZers are quite polite. Don’t like to hurt
there – when you’re gone, that’s it. (USA your feelings. Un – American. They are
values are different) credit society – had to loud, very brash, say whatever. Crass, self-
have the best. Americans didn’t know or care important. Not interested in the rest of the
about NZ. Europeans are interested. Really world. Into material things. Shallower, not
want to come to NZ. as real or sincere, fake.
Beach – loved it. Huge part. Pop had a boat. Beach experiences with friends who had
Take us out fishing. Going to the beach. baches. Friends have fantastic family
Kapiti & West Coast beaches. Riversdale. holidays. Love going to the beach but never
Respect the sea after drowning. Boogie had that type of proper holiday when we
boarding with the kids. Stand and watch. were young. We’re not campers. Husband
Castlepoint. Go with family friends down used to be a surfer.
winding dusty roads – they had a bach. Ended
up at the beach. Going to Lake Taupo. Boat.
Trout fishing. Got into water sports. Biscuit.
Water ski.
Family baches – huge community at Kuratau.
Never a problem getting a bach. Old furniture
and crockery. Feel you can wear your shoes
inside. Foxton – things went to custard. No
holiday – always cleaning gutters. Easy to just
rent.
Clean green country image. Love the forest.
Go on bush walks. Secret grotto. Pockets of
bush all around.
Make connections – put in contact with
people. Distant family in England and Ireland.
Staying with friends’ of friends’ penpal. Their
families coming to stay with us in NZ. Chance
meeting of NZer in Italy – come and stay with
me. Keep in touch at Christmas.
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Karen Lana
Scholarship to go overseas. Scoot around Doing the big OE – very Kiwi thing.
USA for 8 weeks. OE - urge to just head off is Planned Contiki Tour with best friend.
in the Kiwi genes. After education or Pulled out once in London - complete
apprenticeship. Set up with jobs and change of plans. Lived in USA for 18
connections in USA. Sleeping in a VW months. So far away. So much to see. Do
Kombi van. Labouring – funded our travel. things with your friends, away from parents.
Meeting up with sister who was overseas. Get a job, earn some money.
Travel cross-country. Meeting all sorts of
Very attached to special NZ things when
people – so different from us. Dossing with away overseas.
sister in London. Skiing in Innsbruck. Seeing
from Rome to Denmark. Come back and
appreciate what you’ve got after seeing
different things and new ways of doing things.
Travelling for a break: Fiji– weather is Travel experiences – trip to Italy –
tempting. Friends off to Aussie. Trips to experience with high school exchange
Disneyland and Australia Expo when we were student. Visits to family in Australia.
at school. Holidays in Fiji with kids. Road trip and
family wedding in USA.
Circumnavigate the entire country in the Seeing NZ – not as much as I should have.
school holidays. Important for kids to see North Island – Cape Reinga – Wellington.
what’s in your own backyard before you do Nelson, Christchurch, Queenstown,
the international thing. Not happening so Invercargill.
much. So much to offer here. Taking our kids
up north this year.
Places that suggest New Zealandness tourist
guide places. Rotorua and Taupo – for the
culture. Queenstown for the scenery. Also
beaches of Coromandel and Wellington as a
cosmopolitan place. Feel a strong connection
with the land in Wairarapa. Feel that pull. It’s
part of me.
Buy some land and build a home. Want own home with a big backyard.
Once Were Warriors - it is real in some parts
of NZ
Used to go to church. Family involvement
with church. Sunday school. It’s a shame
really. Now bible studies at school.
Symbols: sky & clouds (Night sky too). Green Symbols: haka, kiwi, clean green nuclear
bush. Koru. Maori factor. Whole outdoor free thing, scenery, Kiwi accent -we are
things – nature and natural. Cities – different – Flight of the Conchords, All
Wellington & the Beehive. Accent (say my Blacks, sheep, traditional Maori costumed
name). person.
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If I was a boy I would have taken over the
farm. Harder for girls. Tougher.
Education – Polytech training and cadetship.
Good start. Never too late. Haven’t ruled out
doing more study.
Friends: went flatting. Lifelong friends. Met
husband through flatmates. Making new
friends after having a baby.
Sense of humour – Americans didn’t get it.
We used to tease them all the time.
Stereotypes – different now. Used to be Beer drinking culture.
(certain) stereotypes but not so much
anymore. Blokes worked the chainsaw, earned
a crust. Mum – baking and cleaning, hair in
curlers. Now kids don’t think of men going to
pub / rugby. Mums are now out there doing
stuff, earning. Getting to the top of the
corporate ladder. We are exposed to many
more cultures – Asians, Indians, Maori, South
Africans, English. The stereotypes (of the
past) don’t exist anymore.
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Marcia Nicola
Most teenagers didn’t have such heavy Brought up by Dad. Some time in foster
responsibilities at home eg bringing up other care. Big foster homes; didn’t do anything
kids in the family and looking after kids much. Come home to see Dad once a month.
during the holidays. Most people had more
freedom.
Family is important – no matter whether Keeping in touch with wider family –
whole or part, regardless of situation. Visiting grandfather, step sister, mother’s family,
and staying with grandparents at their nieces, nephews, brother etc. Visiting and
Waiheke home in the holidays. Growing up staying in Kawhia and Te Awamutu. Dad
with cousins. Lots of fun together. Fond helping out with collateral for buying first
memories of Uncle and his train set. home. Having son to stay at Great Barrier.
Most New Zealanders have ancestors that are Scottish and English family history.
English and Scottish. Bit of Welsh and Advantage for getting British passport and
German mixture too. Don’t know much about travelling in Europe.
some parts of family history. Encouraging
everyone to put down something for the next
generation about the family tree.
Dad served & was wounded in Vietnam. Farm experiences. Dad was once a share-
milker. Nephew is dairy manager. Friends
into farming. Have done the milking thing.
Worked hard for what they got. Big families, Work a lot of hours – even on days off. Set
rough upbringing. Money issue – couldn’t yourself goals. Own salon. Own business.
afford for kids to do all the things they Buy a house. It can be hard to motivate
wanted. yourself to get out of a rut. Routine – get up,
go to work, go to bed. Got to do it to
survive. Life is busy. Have to make a date to
see friends.
Most Kiwi mums support kids - watch kids Brother very sporty. Quite involved in
sport and are there for them when they win. diving and Dad into judging. Played hockey.
Wanted Dad to come and watch. Other
people watch All Blacks and cricket on TV
but makes you fall asleep.
Clever homemade skills – cooking, sewing, Do it yourself type people. Doing things
dolls, knit, embroider, craft toys. Had to be around the house. Total renovation. Painting,
able to do these things to get ahead. Able to tiling, knocking down walls. Do anything to
sell things they had made. keep the price down. Friends helped here
and there. Grandfather built his own yacht.
Hospitable, friendly and kind. Visiting Compared to Kiwis, Americans are less
friends’ places and having BBQ. That’s what trusting, pretty arrogant and stand-offish.
New Zealanders do. House full of people at Middle Easterners are very hospitable &
Christmas. Food, friends, family, decorations, treat guests very well. Their culture puts
table settings. women on a pedestal.
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Marcia Nicola
Many other New Zealanders would have gone Real Kiwi holiday. Go to the beach for the
away for family holidays, camping, caravan summer. Camping every year. Morris 1100,
or to the bach once or twice a year. Piha and roll of black polythene / trailer and tent.
Waihi Beach holidays with friends. Want to Cape Reinga, Coromandel. Just go – no
see more of New Zealand – Christchurch and plans. Back then you could camp anywhere.
Dunedin. Everything was just basic. Nowadays, not
the same. More luxury. Go online to get last
minute deals.
Love the beach - picnics and outings – Great looking down over the beach at Great
Ngahau Bay, Titirangi beach. Diving, boat, Barrier. Take a gardening spade. Entertain
fishing, pipi-ing, lunch, dinner, come home yourself. Swimming just amazing. Clean.
late. Six or seven families – pack up the
neighbourhood. Mum had grown up at the
beach – always at the beach. Sailing P class
yacht. In Wellington you miss living near
good beaches.
Outdoor living and eating. Outdoors life –
parks, reserves, mountains like One Tree Hill.
Green grass and animals. Memories of fishing
off Orakei wharf as a kid
Neighbourhood / street community – all In Middle East safe to walk on the streets
families got on. Kids rode bikes together. night or day. Laws are the law. Not like the
Skipping rope with lots of teenagers on the politically correct crap here.
front lawn.
Decent people; goodness of employer – boss It is not hard to make a living or get a job in
and former All Black privately arranged to NZ – as long as you are not fussy. At 22
foot the bill of travel and medical expenses nephew has opportunity to start to buy own
herd and become proper share milker. If you
work, people recognise that. Too many lazy
people – families of dole bludgers.
Grounded in Auckland – missed it terribly, Born and schooled in Auckland but lived for
don’t want to live anywhere else 4 years in Turangi.
Some sort of class system - not commonly
talked about. Today people are judged by
their place on the social ladder - according to
your level of income and what you do.
We’re only little. Achieved a hell of a lot –
world market and sports. We want to stand
out and be noticed.
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Marcia Nicola
Signs: typical dairy signage is a memory from Greenstone – see it on someone and
growing up. Maori art and culture. L&P. Fish instantly know they’re a Kiwi. Lush green
& Chips. Roast lamb. Green grass. hills. Countryside like Waikato reminds you
of home. West Auckland especially has an
accent. Slangy way of talking. Lazy English.
Maori culture is cool but certain amount of
violence in Maori men today. Aggressive.
History of savagery and viciousness. Negative
impressions from high school. Should be 1
country, 1 people – disagree with needing to
have everything back.
Think of New Zealand, think of rugby – but All Blacks widely known in Europe. Rugby
not everyone knows much about it. Sports is a recognisable Kiwi thing.
conquests. Americas Cup watching. Not
necessarily a unique kiwi thing.
Kiwi blokes are bloody lazy. Typical male NZ bloke not that appealing. No finesse, no
doesn’t want to look too competent – might chivalry. Don’t like to dress up. Don’t make
have to help. Expect women to run around an effort with appearance. Hard working.
after them. Some men are into families – Sometimes work too much.
nowadays more so. Drinking.
Kiwi women used to do as they were told. Not Kiwi women – self-sufficient. Independent.
now. Roles are different. Women can have Not defined by male / female position. Get
careers and bring up kids. Can succeed in on and do it – not ‘wait for you father’.
everything if they want to try. Can get a lot
further on. Speak up for ourselves. Strong and
can do it on her own. See this in Shortland
Street and Outrageous Fortune. Our
generation has seen the other side – women’s
activists; bra burning
People are quite laid back. Easy come, easy Happy-go-lucky people. Willing to help.
go. Will go out of their way if you’re in trouble.
Tiki-touring. Seeing New Zealand – have to Want to see New Zealand. Especially the
see the South Island and North Island. South Island. Average New Zealander would
Beautiful beaches. Going all over the place. have travelled more to Australia than own
Showing homestay visitors attractions of country. Favourite place is Te Awamutu
Rotorua and Taupo. Love showing off our where family lived and went to stay every
country. We’re proud of it. Christmas holidays. Typical NZ places
include Auckland, the Coromandel,
Christchurch, Wellington and the Bay of
Islands.
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Heroes: Sir Edmund Hillary – a good role We have heaps of pubs. Swap-a -crate &
model for people. Lion Red. Going to the pub is especially a
rural farming community thing. Nice cold
beer is the best thing after a good day at the
farm. Go out for a night on the town with the
girls. No drinking and driving – get a room
in the city with friends.
Overseas travel & holidays - Tahiti, Travel to Fiji, Italy and Middle East in
Melbourne, Sydney and LA. Had to travel recent years. Gorgeous places. Historical
overseas to get expert medical tests. Visited thing in Italy is amazing. Sightseeing. Get a
Disneyland, Universal Studios. OE is map – let’s go here. Now it’s my time –
common but people our generation are also want to do more travel. Always looking for
doing it after the kids have left. Love to travel cheap deals online. Lots of trips to Aussie to
– lots of places we would love to see. see family and friends. Really accessible.
Lots of interests and activities for kids that are Thing about NZ and Australian rivalry is
good for them and educational. Swimming just a have. Jokes about the brain drain and
club, training, competitions. Ballroom, drama, increase of IQ and. All much of a muchness.
dancing, hockey, netball, music. Rural people and outback farmers are like
Opportunities: give kids a taste of what’s out NZ farming guys. Sydney is a bigger and
there. busier version of Auckland.
Encouraged to go for it. Anyone can do
anything they want to. Student loans – freeing
up women and people on low incomes so they
can study/become what they want. Have a go
- Dancing with the Stars - taken out of their
comfort zone.
Ability to laugh at ourselves New Zealand sense of humour
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Olivia Pippa
Everyone connected to another country – Family descended from Scots, French,
unlike UK & Europe where people have long Welsh. Settled in Greymouth and dispersed
roots in their own country. Affects who you around the country. Family story links to
are and what you do Rob Roy Macgregor coming down from the
Highlands.
Immigrants typically come here with nothing.
Have view that we left something behind for
something better in New Zealand
Self-reliant. So far away from original roots
and wider family support system
Assume most of us will go on OE. Travel for Want to travel. Travel so much. Being so far
long periods. Common to see people coming away; it costs a lot. Go for extended length
and going overseas. Look at other cultures. of time. Do OE – drive to go overseas –
Experience completely different way of life, most Kiwis young or old have an OE.
landscapes, poverty (of others). Expect to Advised to see New Zealand first.
support ourselves and experience hardship. Experiences of travel –girlfriend did not go
Prepare for OE by taking jobs that involve on ship; last minute change of plan to travel
moving around, getting experiences. Change alone. Europe. Living in London.
perceptions of other cultures by appreciating Experiences of Canadian Immigration.
their magnificent past - history and buildings. Hitch–hiking. Driving across Canada –
Travelling makes book learning come to life. sleeping in a car. Travel bug. Later took a
year out and travelled.
Typical upbringing – simple life, outdoors Into the outdoors. Outdoors is safe – no
orientated, walking, biking, bush, streams, harmful animals. New Zealanders have no
rivers. Lots of children playing together. fear of the outdoors. Beach, bush, bush
Neighbours looked out for kids. walking, surfing, skiing. Love anywhere
there’s a nice beach. Love the ocean. Never
live far from the ocean. Fishing, Collecting
shells. Collecting ferns and native plants for
the home garden. Digging in the low tide for
toheroas. Tua tua fritters.
Support system is often friends not blood Making time for family - family time
relatives. Always have family meals together. together – beach, picnic, visiting people
Open house with friends visiting. every Sunday no matter what.
New Zealand less violent than other places. Used to be a safe place – riding bike to
Crime is present but not as bad as comparable school. Not so safe now, crime is getting
countries. We still think of the Police as bad. Crime is everywhere but it’s escalated
friends that will help us. here. Always had a vege garden – that’s
what you do. Now days some people don’t
know what to do
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Olivia Pippa
Drinking culture – getting drunk as quickly as Rugby racing and beer men – not so
possible is widespread attitude. Frequent prevalent now.
drinking sessions common for years although
young generation seem to have even riskier
drinking behaviours.
Eventual return to New Zealand, often for Keep coming back to New Zealand roots –
family reasons. Expect to settle down and get family and friends. Love being back.
a house. Have a large backyard.
Rugby dominant culture. Topic of Rugby – big part of Kiwi psyche. Male
conversation everywhere. Advantage in life if domain. Brought up with rugby.
you can talk rugby and / or are linked to a
rugby man.
Sporty, active childhood. Ballet, athletics,
skating, netball, tennis. Involved in all sorts
of sports. Team sport at primary,
intermediate and secondary school. Sports
captain. Father coached, brother played
rugby. Sold pies in the rugby club canteen
with Mum.
Unwarranted sense that if you went to uni you People only went to uni to be a doctor,
are better / elite compared to others. lawyer or accountant.
Not many Maori friends. Parents had no Unique New Zealand movies have cultural
knowledge of Maori culture. themes – Whale Rider, Once Were Warriors,
The Piano. Maori is a strong force in New
Zealand now. Learned pois and stick games,
but that’s as far as it went. Probably should
investigate a bit more about Maori – could
do courses but don’t get around to it.
Multi-cultural society now. Can’t tell the
difference between Tongan, Samoan, Maori.
Deserve to ‘have a life’. Work hard, play hard Sheer tenacity and luck. I can do it –
mentality. Especially as young adults – go attitude, what you put your mind to. Don’t
skiing or diving 2 out of 3 weekends. Getting give up. Give it a go. Keep on going. If you
away and out. Camping or modest fail, you fail. Not inhibited by not being able
accommodation. to do anything.
Expectation of accessibility of any coastline,
park or sporting group. No barriers to
participation or entry. It’s not about money
(except in some elitist sports like cricket and
tennis).
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Do not like people who talk themselves up New Zealand people – softer attitude than
(except in specific appropriate circumstances Aussies (less brash). People of the land.
in business). Small town affinity. Even if you grow up in
the city, holidays are very countrified.
People make their own entertainment.
Similar to Canadians.
Not the Kiwi way to gain personal advantage Tall poppy syndrome – see it in government
over others in the group / community. workers and social services – criticise
Personal coaching & extra tutoring should not earning a lot of money. Should be good on
be used to get ahead (only to catch up?). Tall you if you’re successful – attitude of people
poppy syndrome. Some people think that in free enterprise.
advantages like those will not happen in ‘real
life’. Some people think that trying to do
better than others is wrong. Being the
brightest (in your class) can be a
disadvantage.
New Zealanders are loved around the world
– unlike Americans who are not.
Gallipoli – anti war attitude. In the air – Grandfather had leg shot off at Gallipoli.
epiphany. Celebrating soldiers who went – Visiting Gallipoli is phenomenal. Touching.
who had done what they had done for our Proud to be a Kiwi. War is so wrong – no
country. purpose. Being so welcomed by the Turks is
very special.
Relatively classless society. Did not have any Down to earth, basic, nice people. Business
sense of class distinctions years ago but do people and people ‘high up’ away from their
notice in contemporary Auckland. work situation - no pretension.
Differences within Auckland – Westies,
South Auckland, Central, Eastern suburbs.
Some - more superior, less sophisticated,
poverty & lack of pride. Not all getting a
good chance to make something of their
lives.
Proud to show our country to people. They
say you should be in the tourist industry.
Proud of natural attributes.
Tradition of wandering in, going to your New Zealand and Aussies stand out as more
neighbour’s without an invitation is starting to casual. Eg. Wedding clothes fashionable,
disappear. distinctive, casual not so formal.
Chauvinistic society. People wrongly say that No 8 wire – can fix anything. Most men are
there is no discrimination on grounds of race useful. Women get stuck in and do stuff.
or sex. But with persistence, women can work
around barriers and succeed.
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Patriotic sports supporters – anyone who is Kiwi Aussie relationship. New Zealanders
doing well we like. Any team that is beating have the mickey taken out of them in
another national team we like. Not so Australia. So much fun. They’re always
interested in local competitions, especially in there for you. Support Aussies in a final if
women’s sports. New Zealand is not in it.
Holidays are about going to the beach (or Exploring New Zealand. Caravan. Fabulous
skiing). Camping or a beach house, holidays free camping. East Cape, up north
swimming, toys such as boat, sea biscuit, Woolley’s Bay. Camping on a farm under
snorkelling gear. Going to the same (beach) the same pohutukawa tree every year right
place OR trying to go to different places. across from the beach. Catching up with the
people who went every year to the same
camping spot. Later experienced South
Island - working in Queenstown. Special
places: Coromandel - Tairua. Matapouri.
Holidays spent travelling to see
Grandparents.
Haka is a Kiwi thing. Bush is distinctive –
lush green, pongas, contrasting trees and
ferns.
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Summer at the beach. Caravan. Every Summer holidays camping at the beach.
summertime weekend. Know everyone. Mucking around in the swimming pool at
Communal living. Boats, rock fishing, bush home. Sand, surf, jet ski. Boogie board,
walks, collecting treasure, swimming sandcastles, beach cricket, swing ball, tua
windsurfer, dinghy, plenty to do. Easy life. tua fritters. Always with friends – communal
Hanging out around the pool. living. Kids entertain themselves, freedom,
independence, do their own thing. Camping
tricks, drinking games, poker night – annual
rituals.
Grandparents had hard life – war injuries, Soldiers - respect for what our men did for
farming, hardship us. ANZAC day parade.
Small world – in provincial areas everyone
knows of you
Travelling – seeing New Zealand first is New Zealand is a great place to live. See real
important. Doing the South Island. Realise poverty in Soweto. Extreme weather in
how gorgeous New Zealand is once you travel Australia. New Zealand has friendly people
overseas e.g. USA. who talk to strangers. Not in so much of a
hurry.
Clean, green, beautiful waterfalls, white sandy
beaches, awesome natural things.
Relaxed people (but not asleep like in Fiji), Know how to relax, like quiet time by the
laidback, country style. Easy; it doesn’t pool. Be good if you could “bottle” this
matter. Don’t mind our ‘Ps and Qs’. Not prim attitude. Casual. Get a few mates around and
& proper. Happy. Appearances aren’t too beers - chilling out.
important.
Type of humour that seems to be putting
people down – could be taken the wrong way.
Say the first thing that pops into your mind –
be natural. Use slang a lot.
Kiwi blokes are rough, quiet, hardworking, Kiwi bloke – fun with the boys, stick
relax by taking 4WD – pushing to limit, down together, make a joke of the whole thing,
time have a few beers together. What stays on
goes on tour stays on tour. Talk a lot of
nonsense. Boys will be boys – love their
toys. DIY
Spend weekends on DIY projects even if it DIY – sometimes it works but mostly not so
means doing it wrong. Intend saving time and good.
money. Weekends for doing projects for
yourself, escape from busy week life
Only country that is nuclear free. We’re only
little but we say “no” – it’s worth it.
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Kids play sports and men watch sport. New Play a lot of sports. Keeps kids out of
Zealand famous for All Blacks trouble. Parents get involved. Help with
coaching. School teams.
Follow a lot of sports. ABs and rugby
instilled in us from early age. Icons.
National sport. Good thing to grow up to be.
New Zealand does pretty well for its size. In
sport not such good facilities but we do just
as well. Pretty good cross-section of talent
for the size of our wee dot.
Heroes are the unpaid volunteers (e.g. in Doing the right thing.
Arthritis Foundation) who just keep going.
Give so much - emailing, putting the message
out there, organising details of annual appeals.
Australians are very similar to New Australians are obnoxious to New
Zealanders. Lots of cousins and Aunties; Zealanders. Close rivals. Always saying
friends coming and going to live there. we’re no good.
We get our heads down. Get on with it. Not
a big palaver over everything. Just do it. No
need for fanfare and red carpet. No fuss.
Save up to put deposit on own home or OE.
Home ownership is a big kiwi thing.
Staying home and being there for kids is
ideal if at all possible.
Pohutukawa, Maori moko and other tattoos, Symbols – pavlova, kiwifruit, silver fern (on
stubbies and jandals, Air New Zealand logo, black flag) New Zealand flag, All Blacks,
Vegemite, L&P, woodpigeons & berries, bush national anthem in Maori and English
New Zealand movies off-putting to overseas
people - show that New Zealand is a
dreadful place to be. Once Were Warriors –
shows horrible rough people. Awful and
disgusting. People getting beaten up. Being
drunk too much. Does happen but not typical
for me. Whale Rider. The Piano. Outrageous
Fortune takes the mickey out of Westies –
quite humorous to see the ugg boot wearing,
breast-popping-out people.
Anika Moa, Dave Dobbyn, Split ENZ,
Dame Kiri and other opera singers.
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Can be too critical (especially of sports
people). Get down on them if they lose.
Knock successful people. Green eyed envy
thing. Want what others have got. Can’t be
happy with what they’ve got.
Valuing having plenty of family and friends
to share life with. Shared love of speedway
& stockcars – family thing where extended
family hang out together. In each other’s
houses and on holidays together. Mucking in
together. Grandparents always there.
Learning about gardening from them.
Women like to hang out with other women –
have a glass of wine and chew the fat
Links at some time with farming life
Childhood - opportunities to run around, get
outside, kick a ball and be kids. Not over-
emphasis on academics – balanced life of
academics, family life, sports and chilling
out. That’s the kiwi way. Happiness is
important.
Try things. Give it a go. Not afraid of the
knockbacks. So what? Move on. Don’t take
things too seriously.
Motivated people. Not lazy.
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Many Aucklanders you meet were brought up Ancestors arrived in Lyttleton. Born in
out of town. Depth of character from not Christchurch. Moved up to Auckland. Better
totally being brought up in Auckland. Moved work prospects up here.
around a bit from town to town.
Stereotypes: Aucklander - not well liked by Typical woman used to look after the
rest of NZ. Not as resourceful as others. children. Not a highly sophisticated person.
Country bumpkin – genuine, not concerned Now Kiwi woman gets what she wants to
about appearances, show hospitality, old get out of life. She can have children – she
fashioned. Victim – don’t want to take can hold it off till she’s 30 something. Owns
responsibility, put limits on themselves cars and houses and is more sophisticated. In
through their (poor) choices. Patched gangs – the past 20 years or more the typical Kiwi
not safe to be around, intimidating, smelly, bloke was insensitive, didn’t cry, and didn’t
drunk, bullying. Sport and outdoors people. understand women’s feelings. Think of guys
in their stubbies and the mullets and not
being as goal oriented. Maybe today’s
typical Kiwi bloke is more buffed and in
touch with his feelings. Stereotypes: The
Maori boy who’s gone wrong, has been in
prison and trying to go straight.
Big OE trip. Travelling around Europe in Couldn’t wait to go overseas. Accepted
campervan. Kiwi pilgrimage thing. Husband thing – certain age and you did your big OE.
had done Contiki tour. Some people work in Everybody in those days wanted to travel
London – can be one step forward, 3 steps overseas, that was our heritage. Wanted the
back. experience of travel and other cultures.
Came backwards and forwards a bit and
worked in London. Done a lot of travel on
my own. Love to do more travel in the future
– esp. seeing museums and art galleries. Do
a food journey.
Become more of a Kiwi when you are out of Realise that NZ was actually a pretty
the country. Proud to be NZer travelling fabulous country. Allows freedom, don’t
around. Always had Vegemite & lemon honey have to worry about war, starvation, being
– reminds you of home. afraid in our homes, being able to vote for
government, getting a good education.
People say - had a wonderful time but can’t
wait to get back. Tie to your parents.
Ancestors from Scotland, England and small Ancestors originally from France via the
part Ngai Tahu. Visiting gravestones of UK.
grandfather’s Scottish family
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Homesick. Winter in Europe is not great. Hate Realise that NZ was actually a pretty
being away from the sea – never live far from fabulous country. Allows freedom, don’t
the sea. Missing the great things people tell have to worry about war, starvation, being
you about that are happening at home. afraid in our homes, being able to vote for
Concern about getting jobs when returning to government, getting a good education.
NZ. People say - had a wonderful time but can’t
wait to get back. Tie to your parents.
Coming back – astounded at how naive
NZers were – not as much locking doors and
protecting property. Backwards. Traffic had
got a lot busier in the ‘80s.
Staying on a farm. Sleep out style cottage. Taking the car and going on picnics –
Adventure. Making hay, exploring. Not gathering the family. Go down to the river in
unusual - most New Zealanders have contact Christchurch or to Birdlings Flat where
with real farmers (not just on lifestyle blocks). there’s a lot of gemstones on the beach.
Playing cards, Bingo nights. Good times. Wenderholm. Often with one or
two friends of the family. Amongst huge
crowds of Island families at Wenderholm.
Love going to the beach. Dark sand west coast Love going to the beach. Playing in the
beaches. Picnics with friends at Long Bay. water. Always been a bit of a water girl.
BBQ. Boxing day and New year’s picnics. Collecting pussy willow. Love to be a
Waimarama, Ocean Beach. West Shore. fishing person – memories fishing off the
Boating picnics at Kawau. wharf; hiring a boat up north. Catching
kahawai.
Family holidays. Bach, budget motel. School holidays were boring – there were
Caravanning, free camping in a clearing or not the things you do now. Parents have to
campground. Lake Taupo. Meeting other work. Head down to the swimming pools
families camping there. Taemaro Bay – right everyday and swim. Go to the movies with a
on the beach, rubber ducky, fishing, dragging donut and Fanta. Family culture was not to
body boards, exploring the beach. Cook over go camping or take the kids way or really do
a fire, make your own fun, don’t go to shop. too much. These days - typical NZer
Reading. bringing up a child - there’s not a lot left
over for holidays. Holidays to see parents in
Christchurch.
Mountains and lakes are home for South We like to describe how absolutely beautiful
Islanders. the country is. Green pastures and rolling
hills. Opportunities to ski or to lie in the sun
in the Far North. Fisherman head north to do
big sea fishing. Fresh air. Mountains and
valleys. See places and think – I want to go
there – with my daughter.
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Get away. Get out of Auckland. Road trips Love places like Paihia. Got very
around SI and NZ. 90 Mile Beach, Taupo, commercial but still beautiful, pristine,
Rotorua, bubbling mud. Surprising that some beach, tuis in the trees, the sun shining.
people have not done this (seen a lot of NZ). Kiwiness of Waitangi – looking out over the
Weekends away exploring. In the bush, seeing water and thinking about our heritage –
little settlements (usually expect peace & when they first came to NZ and the Maori.
quiet). Other people go tramping. Little Going over to Russell in the boat.
adventures. Going where other people don’t’ Pompallier House. Rotorua is another
go. favourite. Whakarewarewa and the hot
pools. Waiwera hot pools. Te Papa is a real
NZ place. Wellington with the parliament
buildings. Christchurch. Mt Cook and
Ruapehu for skiing. Queenstown is a special
place.
Selling up and going to Australia. Family Adventurous spirit – e.g. Sir Edmund
plans to run a business but didn’t work out. Hillary. Sailors & adventurers. Great
Came home to NZ pretty soon. Went to Fiji scientists. Splitting the atom
for work when needed a job. Didn’t really like
being away.
Celebrations, Christmas, holidays, playing
and visits with lots of cousins, grandmother,
aunt and extended family. Continued today
with Mum and husband’s family. Sunday
roast with family.
Maori. Respect the culture of indigenous
people. They are family orientated. Try to be
understanding. Turned off Maori issues -
rammed down your throat in the 1980s and
90s. Can’t undo the past. Not hard done by.
Treaty settlements providing grants &
scholarships – positive discrimination.
Overseas people think Maori run around in
grass skirts & could work as servants.
See all types of people in other towns and NZ identity has changed from European,
cities but not so much (variety) in (each Maori & Pacific Island people. Now huge
suburb of) Auckland / North Shore. Some numbers of Chinese, Korean, Middle
places overrun by Asians. Immigration needs Eastern people. Find it really hard to
to boost up numbers of people with English / integrate. They mix with their own cultures
Scottish heritage. and language – holding on to their own
identity.
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No class system. Everyone has a chance. England is terribly different from NZ. More
Opportunities for affordable education. Can of a class structure. Snobby wealthy people
prove yourself through hard work and ethics. and the hired help – you’re down there.
Anything is possible. Not afraid. Will take Everything prim and proper – they wouldn’t
calculated risks. sit on the floor and play with the children. In
NZ wealthy people do have a different view
of life but not like overseas (living in almost
a castle). Our country is not very old.
Practical people. Home renovations. Fixing You can start off as almost a nobody and
things. Pioneering spirit. Arts and crafts – end up on the international scene – Ed
generations of people doing own sewing, Hillary Bee Keeper. Helen Clark –
knitting, quilting, scrapbooking, macramé, University girl. More opportunities for
cane baskets, embroidery, cross-stitch, education now. In my generation parents just
wearable arts. Easy to be creative in NZ. didn’t think that their kids could go to
Woollen hand knitted jumpers. Very NZ. university. Fully supportive of children
furthering learning after college. Know that
our children will have to have some sort of
formal education. Different attitudes to
Asian families – their parents very, very
focused on education – got to compete to do
better in life.
New Zealanders are famous everywhere -Ed We’re very (hand craft) crafty people.
Hillary, Peter Blake Quite easy to be famous
in NZ.
Not restrained. Open, sharing, accepting. (Informal) Not so strict – eat dinner on the
Casualness. Easy going, nice people. People couch – used to sit at table, put knives and
can be individuals. Don’t have to conform. forks together, never leave dishes on the
Fitting in at school. bench. Freedom – esp. in relationships - not
restrictive like Chinese, Korean and
Japanese culture. Home stay students can
catch a bus somewhere. Help themselves to
food.
Friendly. Love showing off our country. Down to earth and friendly – compared to
Proud. Hospitable and helpful. big overseas cities like London. Tourists
comment on this.
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Decent people. Nice place to live. Good place Honest. Humble. Not so ego-centred –
to bring up kids. Better standard of life than NZers brought up with a bigger view of how
other parts of the world. Can grow your own to care about other people. We don’t come
veges. Not too hot or cold. No wild beasts. from huge cities where it has to be ‘get out
People are well educated, well travelled. of my way’ push and shove. Plain speaking.
Basic NZer has a family but has a vision.
Visionaries, kind, compassionate people.
Willing to help others and making a
difference. Eg Fred Hollows and Edmund
Hillary.
Environmentally conscious - keeping this Life used to be simpler and slow. Worked at
nation as beautiful and unspoilt as possible for 9 -5 jobs. We weren’t so rushed. Walked a
benefit of future generations lot. Less pressure to go places and be
someone. Mum baked several types of
biscuits – ate lots of sugar and fats. Home
cooked way we do food – the meat and veg.
Rare to have takeaways. Not a lot of choices
in every way. Less materiality. We
supported more of our own manufacturers.
Now thousands of Japanese imported cars
and everything’s overseas – even Fisher and
Paykel.
Unique sense of humour. Humour closer to
British than USA. Tui – Yeah right!
NZ known for: All Blacks, rugby & haka.
Yachting. Not many people, lots of sheep.
Everyone wants to visit NZ and come back
again. Clean, green, pure.
Films / TV show wild, wide open spaces & Buying your own home. On a full section.
beach settlements. People are rough and
appear to be not very well educated, shallow.
We have a strong accent. Resilience. Violent
culture. Sensitive to Maori culture.
Used to be a safe place. There’s a lot of crime here in NZ. I’m
embarrassed to watch the News with the
crime in front of overseas students. We’ve
got as many problems as any other country
but I don’t think there is a better place for
overall quality of life.
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Values have changed. Manners – saying
please and thank-you. Respecting elders,
standing up on the bus. Not being rude &
crude. Used to dress up (gloves) esp if going
to the city. When visiting anyone there was
home baking. Saving, budgeting. Mum &
Dad didn’t spend money needlessly or
extravagantly.
Talk about war time experiences not very Used to think old guys who go to ANZAC
interesting. Block it out of my mind. Probably and RSA were a pack of drinkers. Now
should be interested. realise the significance of their commitment.
Most similar to Australians, then English, Australians are the closest to our culture but
then Canadians (rather than Americans). New they’re definitely louder, cruder.
Zealanders have a good reputation overseas.
Quite well accepted except for young ones in
Kombi vans who are on a drink fest.
Symbols: silver fern, koru, kiwi, kiwifruit, Symbols: Kiwi accent and the slangs we use.
wide open spaces, grass and greenery, Air NZ symbol. Jandals. Big Ben pies.
mountain & volcanoes, sea, water, biggest Buzzy bees. T-shirts. TT2 ice-blocks. Mr
coastlines, birds, tuis, fernery, pongas. Key.
Steinlager, L&P, Tim Tams, Pineapple
All familiar with: rugby, All Blacks, Silver
Lumps, Weetbix etc.
Ferns, John Walker, Peter Blake. Edmonds
cookbook & recipes.
Aucklanders familiar with: ASB, Smith &
Caughey’s and Farmers – treat visiting the
top floor of the store, seeing the white
cockatoo and having lunch.
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Text Units
Myths and Stories Category and Text Unit Examples
Aware that violent underbelly exists
There is that criminal undertone here too as everyone knows. Yeah the Outrageous Fortune stuff. And
obviously at the moment there’s a lot of problems with P and in that kind of way I guess probably a
lot of the, not so, some of the families are not doing so well. (Belinda)
[Thinking of Once Were Warriors] they’re just horrible rough, awful, disgusting people. Beat people
up and drink too much and, just not very nice ... But it’s, yeah, but it’s, but I mean, yes. I know things
do happen, I’m not saying that they don’t but it’s not, well, for me it’s not, not a typical, no, although
it probably does happen more than what I know. (Tess)
[In several towns I have lived in] the gangs were quite predominant and quite intimidating, the
Mongrel Mob or whatever and if they came into town there was lots of incidences. They were big
people that would get drunk or they were smelly with their patches on and sort of rough people and, in
cars or vans or motorbikes but they would hang out round certain hotels which are just on the edge of
the main place, but you have to be careful where you walked. (Virginia)
Benefits of team sport
Getting them involved in team things, even though it’s not just a sport thing it’s, it’s getting them to
interact with other people and to learn how to, you know, deal with bumps and knocks and, you know,
fighting with Jimmy next door. And not, not sheltering them in particularly, just exposing them to, to
various things. (Georgina)
I actually think it’s a really important thing for kids to do even, you know, even if they’re not great at
it, I mean it’s a bonus I think if they are, but I think if they, I think it’s a really good sort of social skill
apart from anything else, you know, being, to be involved in a sport where they’re not just doing it, a
team sport I think is a really good thing. And from a health sort of, you know, a health perspective I
think it’s a really great thing to be doing as well. (Ingrid)
Camaraderie when overseas
I think we do look out for each other overseas. I mean if you go to London and you, you know I’ve
been to London before and a friend of mine was over there doing her OE so I met up with her and
they pretty much stick to the London, in London they have their Kiwi and Australian bars and they
stick together over there like more so than they do mixing you know they have a lot in common.
(Belinda)
We were buying supplies ... on our way to Milan and I was saying to [my husband], “Look at that
lady behind us with all her cheeses!” So she heard us yakking away, and she just couldn’t help
herself, but say, “So where you guys from? New Zealand or Australia?” And I’m just like, ‘cause no
one spoke English in this little town, and I was, “We’re from New Zealand.” She’s like, “So am I.” So
she was, oh she would’ve been in her 40s then, and she said, “Oh, I went on my OE and ended up
marrying an Italian guy and I’m still here, and come stay with me.” So we did. (Karen)
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Symbolism Typical of New Zealand National Identity Illustrated with Text Units
Symbolism Category and Text Unit Examples
All Blacks as icons
I wonder whether it is because of that whole New Zealand icon thing and for little boys growing up
most of them want to be an All Black. (Tess)
I mean I never had a backpack but you see kids they just want a Kiwi flag [sewn on] or the All Blacks
[badge] too. (Pippa)
What else are symbols of New Zealand? Oh the All Blacks. Definitely. (Lana)
Landscapes of distinction
[Things that symbolise New Zealand would be] bungy jumping I suppose, I don’t know. Just outdoor
... (Belinda)
I’d say and the sun and the beach probably, yeah, I probably relate to when I think of Kiwi things.
(Helen)
You know, this is going to sound funny, but the sky and the clouds are, and our night sky’s fantastic.
But the clouds to me, and I’m a big fan of Rita Angus, or Rita Cook the artist, and she draws her
clouds fluffy, and that to me is a typical New Zealand sky. (Karen)
If I was away, then the sea would remind me of home. Whereas people I know from the South Island
it’s the mountains. The wide open spaces and the greenery and the water, the sea. (Virginia)
Shared recognition of iconic products/ brands
Vogel’s bread. Vegemite. L&P. (Elaine)
Shared recognition of kiwiana icons
We’ve had the tikis and the Maori thing but I think we’re more than that. The tomato sauce in the
tomato, you know, container. The buzzy bee toy. All of that is all what New Zealand is and it’s great
that you can see it now more than ever. (Elaine)
You think of the funny things like pavlova. And you look at the kiwifruit and all that sort of thing,
although other countries call them gooseberry but, kiwifruit and, no, nobody, unless you’re a Kiwi
you probably don’t really look at those things and think oh Kiwi stuff. (Tess)
Shared recognition of Maori symbols
Maori designs really are you know they epitomise New Zealand to me whether you’re Maori or not. I
think if you were to see a koru on someone in America you would think, “Oh choice look at that,” you
know, a bit of home there. (Donna)
So I mean if you saw someone with [a Maori moko tattoo] on or, you know, markings on their
shoulders of those sort of things you’d be like “Well I know where you’re from.” (Sharon)
Shared recognition of native flora & fauna
You see your kiwi [bird] everywhere, you know, yep that reminds you of home all the time. (Marcia)
I think our bush is very has a strong identity with New Zealand and when you go to the bush in other
countries it’s just so, so, so different. Our bush is so lush and green and I think a lot of that is the
pongas. The, the contrast of the pongas and the, actually trees as opposed to ferns. I think that’s one of
our very, very strong features of our bush. (Pippa)
Sort of symbols like maybe pohutukawa, you know the red and the green. (Sharon).
318
APPENDIX 8 NATIONAL IDENTITY CATEGORIES ILLUSTRATED WITH TEXT UNITS
319
APPENDIX 8 NATIONAL IDENTITY CATEGORIES ILLUSTRATED WITH TEXT UNITS
Place Issues Typical of New Zealand National Identity Illustrated with Text
Units
Place Issues Category and Text Unit Examples
Connections to special places in New Zealand
I feel it’s such a strong connection with the land down there, and just going back this Christmas to
visit a friend in Wairarapa, I said to [my brother], “Gosh, it’s a really weird feeling, but you know, I
just feel that connection,” just seeing the land in a way, it’s very unique, the whole Wairarapa
landscape, and just going back there, and feel that pull, and I said, “Wow, it’s really a part of me, an
integral part.” (Karen)
I absolutely love Paihia. So beautiful. Because it’s pristine and the beach is up there and the Kiwiness
of it, like going up to Waitangi and standing out there on the edge and looking over the water and
thinking about our heritage and when they first came to New Zealand and the Maori up there. There’s
thousands of tuis in the trees and the sun shining. (Waverley)
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