00535nas a2200133 4500008004100000245009000041210006900131260000900200653001400209100001600223700002200239700002500261856011500286 2021 eng d00aThe Politication of Objects: Meaning Making and Materiality in the US Cannabis Market0 aPolitication of Objects Meaning Making and Materiality in the US c202110aMarketing1 aHuff, Aimee1 aHumphreys, Ashlee1 aWilner, Sarah, J. S. u/biblio/politication-objects-meaning-making-and-materiality-us-cannabis-market01316nas a2200157 4500008004100000245009000041210006900131260000900200300001200209490000700221520075900228653001400987100002501001700001601026856011601042 2017 eng d00aObjects of Desire: The Role of Product Design in Revising Contested Cultural Meanings0 aObjects of Desire The Role of Product Design in Revising Contest c2017 a244-2710 v333 aWe explore the link between product design and market legitimation by examining the evolution of a product market that has been shrouded by cultural taboo. Conducting media analysis and selected visual audits of sex toys over a recent 25-year period, we find that innovations in the design of these products – materials, form and function – can facilitate evolution of a mainstream market. Producers can facilitate legitimation by introducing innovative designs that significantly contradict existing cultural meanings associated with the category. Furthermore, when the aesthetic and functional aspects of a new product design are aligned with cultural norms, we find that mainstream media reframe the products in ways that signal social acceptance.10aMarketing1 aWilner, Sarah, J. S.1 aHuff, Aimee u/biblio/objects-desire-role-product-design-revising-contested-cultural-meanings00504nas a2200121 4500008004100000245008400041210006900125260002600194653001400220100001600234700002500250856010700275 2015 eng d00aFocus on the Form, Forget about the Function: Marketplaces for Illicit Products0 aFocus on the Form Forget about the Function Marketplaces for Ill aSan Antonio, TXc201510aMarketing1 aHuff, Aimee1 aWilner, Sarah, J. S. u/biblio/focus-form-forget-about-function-marketplaces-illicit-products00502nas a2200121 4500008004100000245008200041210006900123260002100192653001400213100001600227700002500243856011200268 2014 eng d00aBoth Erotic and Ergonomic? Product Design as a Mechanism for Moral Legitimacy0 aBoth Erotic and Ergonomic Product Design as a Mechanism for Mora aLondon, UKc201410aMarketing1 aHuff, Aimee1 aWilner, Sarah, J. S. u/biblio/both-erotic-and-ergonomic-product-design-mechanism-moral-legitimacy