2017
DOI: 10.1108/ejm-11-2015-0765
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Think about it – can portrayals of homosexuality in advertising prime consumer-perceived social connectedness and empathy?

Abstract: Purpose This paper aims to investigate whether portrayals of homosexuality in advertising can generate social effects in terms of consumer-perceived social connectedness and empathy. Design/methodology/approach In three experimental studies, the effects of advertising portrayals of homosexuality were compared to advertising portrayals of heterosexuality. Study 1 uses a thought-listing exercise to explore whether portrayals of homosexuality (vs heterosexuality) can evoke more other-related thoughts and whethe… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
(95 reference statements)
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“…In fact, female stereotypes are not the only ones currently being challenged by marketers. Many marketers are expressing ambitions, for sustainability or other reasons, to incorporate more diverse portrayals in their advertising, for example, in terms of cultures and ethnicities or sexual orientation, while also promoting their brands (Åkestam, Rosengren, & Dahlen, ; Griner & Ciambrello, ; Monllos, ). This twofold approach to what constitutes a successful advertising campaign (one that empowers brands and consumers simultaneously) certainly puts advertising practitioners in a new position, where they need to be aware of the societal role of advertising, as well as its direct effects on consumers (Dahlén & Rosengren, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In fact, female stereotypes are not the only ones currently being challenged by marketers. Many marketers are expressing ambitions, for sustainability or other reasons, to incorporate more diverse portrayals in their advertising, for example, in terms of cultures and ethnicities or sexual orientation, while also promoting their brands (Åkestam, Rosengren, & Dahlen, ; Griner & Ciambrello, ; Monllos, ). This twofold approach to what constitutes a successful advertising campaign (one that empowers brands and consumers simultaneously) certainly puts advertising practitioners in a new position, where they need to be aware of the societal role of advertising, as well as its direct effects on consumers (Dahlén & Rosengren, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This would require a study design that incorporates both traditional advertising effects and assessment of extended effects such as the target audience self‐perception and efficacy (for a similar approach related to advertising creativity, see Rosengren et al., ). What is more, advertising that challenge stereotypes can be found in several different contexts, from portrayal of groups like “stay‐at‐home dads,” interracial dating, or homosexual couples in mainstream advertising (Åkestam et al., ). Future studies are needed to better understand the reactions to such portrayals, and the conceptualization of desired outcomes (e.g., ad reactance) to do so needs to be further refined.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More explicit portrayals of sexual orientation (e.g., two protagonists embracing vs. two protagonists kissing) correspond to more negative reactions from heterosexual consumers, particularly among heterosexual men (Oakenfull et al, 2008;Dotson et al, 2009;Um, 2016). Although recent research has pointed to slightly more positive tendencies (e.g., Pounders and Mabry-Flynn, 2016;Åkestam et al, 2017;Bond and Farrell, 2020a,b), the literature suggests that heterosexual male consumers have a particular aversion to advertising with gay men as protagonists.…”
Section: Attitudes Toward Advertising Featuring Gay Protagonistsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…However, the recognition that advertising has extended effects on consumers provide opportunity to not only make "advertising that is not bad for society", but to make truly good advertising that benefits society at the same time as it serves the advertiser's interest. Recent experiments have found that carefully crafted portrayals and messages in ads can increase consumers' interest in the advertised products and at the same time increase their own creative efficacy (Rosengren, Dahlen, and Modig 2013) and proneness to (unrelated) prosocial behavior (Defever, Pandelaere, and Roe 2011), as well as counteract stereotypes (Åkestam, Rosengren, and Dahlen 2017a), and even increase social connectedness and empathy (Liljedal, Berg, and Dahlen 2020;Åkestam, Rosengren, and Dahlen 2017b).…”
Section: Tga Is Good For the Consumermentioning
confidence: 99%