AgarwalRDugasMGaoG, et al (2019) Emerging technologies and analytics for a new era of value-centered marketing in healthcare. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science48(1): 9–23.
2.
AskegaardSEl-JurdiHOurahmouneN (2025) Reflections on the social imaginary and technologies of the body. Recherche et Applications en Marketing40(3): à paraître.
3.
BarnhartMPeñalozaL (2013) Who are you calling old? Negotiating old age identity in the elderly consumption ensemble. Journal of Consumer Research39(6): 1133–1153.
4.
BassettD (2022) The Creation and Inheritance of Digital Afterlives: You Only Live Twice. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
5.
BelkRWeijoHKozinetsRV (2021) Enchantment and perpetual desire: theorizing disenchanted enchantment and technology adoption. Marketing Theory21(1): 25–52.
6.
BodeMKristensenDB (2016) The digital doppelgänger within: a study on self tracking and the quantified self movement. In: CannifordRBajdeD (éds) Assembling Consumption: Researching Actors, Networks and Markets. New York: Routledge, 119–135.
7.
BoeksteinNBarzilaiNBertramA, et al (2023) Defining a longevity biotechnology company. Nature Biotechnology41(8): 1053–1055.
8.
BollmerG (2013) Millions now living will never die: cultural anxieties about the afterlife of information. Information Society29(3): 142–151.
9.
BostromN (2020) Human genetic enhancements: a transhumanist perspective. In: MurrayTHChuanVT (éds) The Ethics of Sports Technologies and Human Enhancement. New York: Routledge, 339–352.
10.
BostromNRoacheR (2007) Ethical issues in human enhancement. In: RybergJPetersenTWolfC (éds) New Waves in Applied Ethics. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 120–152.
11.
BristleyJ (2020) The future of immortality: remaking life and death in contemporary Russia. Cambridge Anthropology38(1): 146–148.
12.
BrubakerJHayesGDourishP (2013) Beyond the grave: Facebook as a site for expansion of death and mourning. Information Society29(3): 152–163.
13.
CannC (2013) Tombstone technology: deathscapes in Asia, the U.K. and the U.S. In: MacielCPereiraV (éds) Digital Legacy and Interaction: Post-Mortem Issues. Cham: Springer, 101–114.
14.
CarrollERomanoJ (2011) Your Digital Afterlife: When Facebook, Flickr And Twitter Are Your Estate, What’s Your Legacy?Berkeley, CA: New Riders.
15.
CengizHRookD (2016) Voluntary simplicity in the final rite of passage. In: DobschaS (éd.) Death in a Consumer Culture. London: Routledge, 123–134.
CloarecJMeyer-WaardenLTimmlerK, et al (2025) Unlocking minds: psychological roadblocks to the adoption of AI-powered brain–machine interfaces. Recherche et Applications en Marketing40(3): à paraître.
18.
CoppolaFFaggioniLGabelloniM, et al (2021) Human, all too human? An all-around appraisal of the “artificial intelligence revolution” in medical imaging. Frontiers in Psychology12: 710982.
19.
DuFaultBLSchoutenJW (2020) Self-quantification and the datapreneurial consumer identity. Consumption Markets and Culture23(3): 290–316.
GabelT (2016) Cheating death via social self immortalization: the potential of consumption-laden online memorialization to extend and link selves beyond physical death. In: DobschaS (éd) Death in a Consumer Culture. London: Routledge, 137–154.
22.
GieslerM (2012) How doppelgänger brand images influence the market creation process: longitudinal insights from the rise of botox cosmetic. Journal of Marketing76(6): 55–68.
23.
HoffmanDLNovakTP (2018) Consumer and object experience in the internet of things: an assemblage theory approach. Journal of Consumer Research44(6): 1178–1204.
JotterandFIencaM (2023) The Routledge Handbook of the Ethics of Human Enhancement. New York: Routledge.
27.
JylhavaJPedersenNLHaggS (2017) Biological age predictors. EBioMedicine21: 29–36.
28.
KasketE (2019) All the Ghosts in the Machine: The Digital Afterlife of Your Personal Data. London: Robinson.
29.
KneeseT (2023) Death Glitch: How Techno-solutionism Fails Us in this Life and Beyond. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
30.
KomatsuMSakaiADozenA, et al (2021) Towards clinical application of artificial intelligence in ultrasound imaging. Biomedicines9(7): 720.
31.
LenharoM (2023) An AI revolution is brewing in medicine. What will it look like?Nature622(7984): 686–688.
32.
LimaVBelkR (2023) Biohacking COVID-19: sharing is not always caring. Journal of Public Policy & Marketing42(4): 326–342.
33.
LiuCKozinetsRV (2022) Courtesy stigma management: social identity work among China’s “leftover women”. Journal of Consumer Research49(2): 312–335.
34.
LoriotALarceneuxFGuillardV (2025) Redefining an appropriate proximity between patients and health professionals in the context of teleconsultation: an analysis through the feeling of care. Recherche et Applications en Marketing40(3): à paraître.
35.
MimounL (2025) Bioethics and inclusion: the role of regulatory changes in the affect-based legitimation of stigmatized consumers. Recherche et Applications en Marketing40(3): à paraître.
36.
MoreM (2013) The Proactionary Principle. In: MoreMVita-MoreN, The Transhumanist Reader: Classical and Contemporary Essays on the Science, Technology, and Philosophy of the Human Future. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, 258–267.
37.
NunanDDi DomenicoM (2019) Older consumers, digital marketing, and public policy: a review and research agenda. Journal of Public Policy & Marketing38(4): 469–483.
38.
PearceD (2020) Human and intelligent machines: co-evolution, fision, or replacement. In: GouveiaSS (éd.) The Age of Artificial Intelligence: An Exploration. Delaware: Vernon Press, 234–250.
39.
PyrkovTVAvchaciovKTarkhovAE, et al (2021) Longitudinal analysis of blood markers reveals progressive loss of resilience and predicts human lifespan limit. Nature Communications12(1): 2765.
40.
RanischR (2021) When CRISPR meets fantasy: transhumanism and the military in the age of gene editing. In: HofkirchnerWKreowskiH-J (éds) Transhumanism: The Proper Guide to a Posthuman Condition or a Dangerous Idea?Cham: Springer International Publishing, 111–120.
41.
RoweJPLesterJC (2020) Artificial intelligence for personalized preventive adolescent healthcare. Journal of Adolescent Health67(2S): S52–S58.
42.
Schneider-KampA (2024) Can ethics be assembled? Consumer ethics in the age of artificial intelligence and smart objects. Consumption Markets & Culture27(1): 59–70.
43.
Schneider-KampAAskegaardS (2022) Reassembling the elderly consumption ensemble: retaining independence through smart assisted living technologies. Journal of Marketing Management38(17–18): 2011–2034.
44.
Schneider-KampATakharJ (2023) Interrogating the pill: rising distrust and the reshaping of health risk perceptions in the social media age. Social Science & Medicine331: 116081.
45.
SchoutenJW (1991) Selves in transition: symbolic consumption in personal rites of passage and identity reconstruction. Journal of Consumer Research17(4): 412–425.
46.
SinclairDALaPlanteMD (2016) Lifespan: Why we Age—And why we don’t have to. New York: Atria Books.
47.
SistoD (2020) Online Afterlives: Immortality, Memory, and Grief in Digital Culture. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
SorgnerS (2021) We Have Always Been Cyborgs: Digital Data, Gene Technologies, and an Ethics of Transhumanism. Bristol: Bristol University Press.
50.
Sudbury-RileyLHunter-JonesPAl-AbdinA, et al (2024) When the road is rocky: investigating the role of vulnerability in consumer journeys. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science52: 1045–1068.
51.
TakharJ (2020) The voice inside. Marketing Theory20(2): 167–174.
52.
TakharJ (2022) IVF survivorship, the IVF memoir and reproductive activism. Journal of Marketing Management38(5–6): 460–472.
53.
TakharJ (2023) Communicative crises in the age of anxious reproduction and fertility preservation. Consumption Markets & Culture26(3): 210–216.
54.
TakharJHoustonRDholakiaN (éds) (2023) Transhumanisms and Biotechnologies in Consumer Society. London: Routledge.
55.
TakharJRika HoustonH (2021) Forty years of assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs): the evolution of a marketplace icon. Consumption Markets & Culture24(5): 468–478.
WarehamC (2016) The transhumanist prospect: developing technology to extend the human lifespan. In: ScarreG (éd.) The Palgrave Handbook of the Philosophy of Aging. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 517–538.
59.
YanceyK (2018) Tombstones, QR codes and the circulation of past present texts. In: GriesLBrookeC (éds) Circulation, Writing and Rhetoric. Logan: Utah State Press, 61–82.