Material Self Investment Diagram
Needs vs Wants
Consumer Culture
200

You can’t escape it, and it’s the foundation of who you are. It’s the one thing you’re born with and the one thing you take with you everywhere. What is it?

BODY

200

You can’t live without them, but they don’t come with designer labels. These essentials are the foundation of life—what are they?

NEEDS

200

This small plastic tool allows you to spend money you don’t physically have, making purchases convenient—and sometimes regrettable.

CREDIT CARD

400

The second layer of your material self, it allows you to express identity through fabrics, colors, and style.

CLOTHES

400

They sparkle, they shine, and they make life more exciting, but when stripped down to their core, they’re not essential. What are these luxury purchases?

WANTS

400

A risky behavior where buying without forethought often results in post-purchase regret.

IMPULSIVE BUYING

600

You don't choose them, but they're considered an integral part of your material self. Emotional and financial investments are inevitable.

IMMEDIATE FAMILY

600

What concept/s balances an object’s practical function with its symbolic meaning in culture and society?

UTILITY AND/VS. SIGNIFICANCE

600

You may think you’re collecting items, but actually, these items are collecting you. What’s this consumer habit that makes you the possession?

MATERIALISM

800

This place is not just where you sleep—it's the heart of your material self, containing your memories and comfort.

Home

800

Whether it’s luxury cars or limited-edition sneakers, we use these objects to shout our identity to the world. According to semiology, what do our possessions really say about us?

SOCIAL STATUS AND IDENTITY

800

What lifestyle behavior is often a substitute for emotional fulfillment, according to consumer culture studies?

SHOPPING

1000

From cherished heirlooms to everyday gadgets, these objects define your identity, emotions, and aspirations.

MATERIAL POSSESSIONS

1000

You thought you were the one in control, but this powerful force has been shaping your buying habits and defining your social status all along. What invisible hand is guiding you?

CONSUMER CULTURE

1000

It’s everywhere—on your screens, in your magazines, whispering to you from billboards. It turns your wants into needs, but is it a friend or a foe?

ADVERTISING INFLUENCE/ADVERTISEMENTS