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Marketing and social construction : exploring the rhetorics of managed consumption / Chris Hackley.

Business Source Complete Available from 2001. Available online

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EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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EBSCOhost Business Source Ultimate Available from 2001. Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hackley, Christopher E.
Series:
Routledge interpretive marketing research series.
Routledge interpretive marketing research series
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Marketing.
Consumer behavior.
English language--Rhetoric.
English language.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (vii, 225 p.)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
London : Routledge, 2003.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
Presents a social-constructionist critique of popular approaches to teaching, theorising and writing about marketing. Drawing on a range of European and North American studies, this book suggests a broadened theoretical scope and renewed critical agenda for research, theory and teaching in marketing.
Marketing is at the centre of the business education boom: a million or more people worldwide are studying the subject at any one time. Yet despite widespread discontent with the intellectual standards in marketing, very little has changed over the past thirty years. In this ground-breaking new work, Chris Hackley presents a social-constructionist critique of popular approaches to teaching, theorising and writing about marketing. Drawing on a wide range of up-to-date European and North American studies, Dr Hackley presents his argument on two levels. First, he argues that mainstream marketing's ideologically driven curriculum and research programmes, dominated by North American tradition, reproduce business school myths about the nature of practically relevant theory and the role of professional education in management fields. Second, he suggests a broadened theoretical scope and renewed critical agenda for research, theory and teaching in marketing. Intellectually rigorous yet comprehensible, this work will be of vital importance to all those interested in the future of teaching and research in business and management. Marketing is at the centre of the business education boom: a million or more people worldwide are studying the subject at any one time. Yet despite widespread discontent with the intellectual standards in marketing, very little has changed over the past thirty years. In this ground-breaking new work, Chris Hackley presents a social-constructionist critique of popular approaches to teaching, theorising and writing about marketing. Drawing on a wide range of up-to-date European and North American studies, Dr Hackley presents his argument on two levels. First, he argues that mainstream marketing's ideologically driven curriculum and research programmes, dominated by North American tradition, reproduce business school myths about the nature of practically relevant theory and the role of professional education in management fields. Second, he suggests a broadened theoretical scope and renewed critical agenda for research, theory and teaching in marketing. Intellectually rigorous yet comprehensible, this work will be of vital importance to all those interested in the future of teaching and research in business and management.
Contents:
1. Marketing, Ideology and an Excess of Reflex 2. Social Constructionism and a Funny Turn for Marketing Thought 3. All Together Now: What is Marketing? 4. Marketing in a World of Mediated Communication 5. Marketing's Death, Rebirth and Resurrection 6. Tell me George, Where did it all go Wrong? 7. Marketing and Social Construction: Knowledge, Critique and Research in Marketing
Notes:
Originally published: 2001. Transferred to digital printing: 2007.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
1-134-61897-2
0-415-20859-9
1-134-61898-0
1-280-21759-6
0-203-36099-0
9780203360996
OCLC:
252720830

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