Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Bauer, M. A., Wilkie, J. E. B., King, J. K., & Bodenhausen, G. V. (2012). Cuing
consumerism: Situational materialism undermines personal and social well-
being. Psychological Science, 23(5), 517-523. doi
10.1177/0956797611429579
Belk, R. W. (1985). Materialism: Trait aspects of living in the material world.
Journal of Consumer Research, 12, 265-280.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/254373
Bradburn, N. M. (1969). The structure of psychological well-being. Chicago:
Aldine
Brouskeli, V., & Loumakou, M. (2014). Materialism, stress and health behavior
among future educators. Journal of Education and Training Studies, 2(2),
145-150. doi: 10.11114/jets.v2i2.252
Campbell, A., Converse, P. E., & Rodgers W. L., (1976). The quality of American
life: Perceptions, evaluations, and satisfaction . New York: Russell Sage
Carr, A. (2004). Positive Psychology : The Science of Happiness and Human
Strengths. Hove & NewYork : Brunner Routledge Taylor & Francis
Group.
Carver, C.S., & Baird, E. (1998). The American dream revisited: Is it what you
want or why you want it that matter? Psychological Science, 9(4), 289-
292.
Chan, K., Zhang, H., & Wang, I. (2006). Materialism among adolescents in urban
China. Young Consumers, Quarter 1, 64-77.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/17473610610701510
Chaplin, L. N., Hill, R. P., & John, D. R. (2014). Poverty and materialism: A look
at impoverished versus affluent children. Journal of Public Policy &
Marketing, 33(1), 78-92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1509/jhalm.13.050
Cloninger CR (2006) The science of well-being: An integrated approach to mental
health and its disorders. World Psychiatry; 5: 71-76.
Ryan, L., & Dziurawiec, S. (2001). Materialism and its relationship to life
satisfaction. Social Indicators Research, 55(2), 185-197.
Schwartz, S.H., & Sagiv, L. (1995). Identifying culture-specifics in the content and
structure of values. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 26, 92-116.
Shrum, L. J., Lee, J., Burroughs, J. E., & Rindfleisch, A. (2011). An online
processmodel of second-order cultivation effects: How television
cultivates materialism and its consequences for life satisfaction. Human
Communication Research, 37, 34-57. doi:10.1111/j.1468-
2958.2010.01392.x
Solberg, E. G., Diener, E., & Robinson, M. D. (2004). Why are materialists less
satisfied?In T. Kasser & A. D. Kanner (Eds.), Psychology and consumer
culture: The struggle for a good life in a materialistic world (pp. 29-48).
Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.