
Consumption takes place in settings or environments which have  both direct and indirect effects on its dynamic path. Direct effects  of environments on activities in consuming can occur through  constraints that environments impose. Environment can also have  indirect effects on consumption through enduring modification of  internalized constructs which enter heuristics for decisions on  activities. The importance of environments to consumption is increased  by the definitional dependence of status on the judgements of others.  This study examines microprocessing in consumer activities for status  as it interacts with structure in the environments of these  activities.
  The importance of environments in status activities provides the basis  for a seperate, but related inquiry into observed differences in the  form they take across societies. Conjecture on the consequences of  differences in the structure of environments for consumption that  typify a society is studied in the narrative statements by members of  comparison societies and in the content of print advertising in these  societies. Evolutionary processes which could establish observed  differences in structure across societies are also considered in both  their systematic and random components. I review models of random  drift and stochastic resonance as candidate forms for generating  observed structure in environments. Directions for the subsequent  study of status through consumption are discussed. P  
                
- Introduction: Status Through Consumption;
- Knowledge Use in Nonwork Activities for Status;
- Interactions of Consumer Microprocessing and Structured Environments: Activity Feedback and the Stability of Structure;
- Awards and Honors Systems in Structured Environments: Cross Societal Comparisons of Narrative Statements on Consuming for Status;
- Comparative Analyses of Consumption Appeals in the Print Advertising of the USA and France, 1955-1991
- Random Process in the Generation of Structured Environments;
- Overview and directions for Study of Status Through Consumption.



