ISBN-13: 9780367477578 / Angielski / Twarda / 2022 / 490 str.
ISBN-13: 9780367477578 / Angielski / Twarda / 2022 / 490 str.
This comprehensive and authorative sourcebook, offers academics, researchers and students an introduction to and overview of current scholarship at the intersection of marketing and feminism.
"In a world of resurgent inequality, a book on feminist perspectives - which prioritize issues of injustice, exclusion, and subjugation - on the current state of the knowledge and debates in marketing, communications, and consumption is most timely and welcome. The contributions deliberate and expose the gendered nature of institutional and social structures that implicate marketing practices as well as the overlooked female contributions to the production of marketing knowledge."
Guliz Ger, Professor of Marketing, Bilkent University, Turkey
"This invaluable and urgently needed volume will have pride of place on my bookshelves. The carefully curated chapters synthesise and foster interdisciplinary insight, debate and critique surrounding the relationships between marketing and feminism, applying rigorous scholarship in examining a rich array of gendered marketplace practices, ideologies and activism. The collection addresses intersections of gender, class, age and race from the perspectives of an international, multi-generational group of feminist scholars drawing on a range of disciplines."
Stephanie O'Donohoe, Professor of Advertising and Consumer Culture, University of Edinburgh Business School, UK
"This tour de force volume provides a comprehensive and innovative study of the intersections among marketing, gender, and feminist theory. These collected works deftly trace out the marginalized voices, socio-cultural complexities, historical relations, and politics-of-identity conflicts that have shaped the marketing of gender and the gendering of marketing theory and practice. The Routledge Companion to Marketing and Feminism is a must read for anyone seeking to understand marketing's gendered past, present and future."
Craig Thompson, Churchill-Bascom Professor of Marketing, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
1. Editor’s Introduction to the Companion Pauline Maclaran, Lorna Stevens and Olga Kravets Section 1: Women in the History of Marketing 2. Goddesses of the Household: Martha Van Rensselaer and the Role of Home Economics in Marketing Theory Mary Zuckerman 3. Creating the Critical Consumer: Helen Woodward and Hazel Kyrk on Self-Determination and the Good-Life Mark Tadajewski 4. Marketing’s Hidden Figures: Black Women Leaders in Advertising Judy Foster Davis 5. Marketing Education and Patriachal Acculturation: The Rhetorical Work of Women’s Advertising Clubs, 1926-1942 Jeanie Wills Section 2: Gender Representations in the Marketplace 6. Feminist Brands: What Are They, and What’s the Matter with Them? Eileen Fischer and Cele Otnes 7. "One, Two, Three, Four, What Are We Fighting For?": Deconstructing Climate-Crisis War Messaging Metaphors using Ecofeminism Andy Prothero and Susan Dobscha 8. Menstruation in Marketing: Stigma, #femvertising, and Transmedia Messaging Catherine A. Coleman, Katherine C. Sredl 9. In Search of the Female Gaze: Querying the Maidenform Archive Astrid Van den Bossche 10. From identity politics to the politics of power: men, masculinities and transnational patriarchies in marketing and consumer research Wendy Hein and Jeff Hearn Section 3: Feminist Perspectives on the Body in Marketing 11. Materializing the Body: A Feminist Perspective Anu Valtonen and Elina Närvänen 12. Transformations: Is There a Role for Feminist Activism in Women’s Sport? Jan Brace-Govan 13. Women’s Sexual Practices: The B-Spot of Marketing and Consumer Research Luciana Walthers 14. Taking off the Blindfold: The Perils of Pornification and Sexual Abjectification Alexandra Rome 15. The Quest for Masculine To-be-looked-at-ness? Exploring Consumption Based Self-Objectification Among Heterosexual Men Jacob Ostberg Section 4: Difference, Diversity and Intersectionality 16. Are All Bodies Knit-worthy? Interrogating Race and Intersecting Axes of Marginalization in Knitting Spaces Alev Kuruoglu 17. Marketing and the Missing Feminisms: Decolonial Feminism, and the Arab Spring Nacima Ourahmoune 18. Going Back to the Roots and Extending Beyond: Capturing the [Power] Dynamics of Human and Non-Human Things of Climate Change Inequities Laurel Steinfeld 19. Consumption Beyond the Binary: Feminism in Transgender Lives Sophie Duncan Shepherd and Kathy Hamilton 20. Ageism, Sexism and Women in Power Minita Sanghvi and Phillip Frank 21. Our Aging Bodies, Ourselves Lisa Peñaloza Section 5: Gendering Digital Technologies in Marketing 22. Black Women’s Digital Media and Marketplace Experiences: Between Buying, Branding and Black Lives Matter Francesa Sobande 23. The Symbolic Violence of Digital (Anti-)Feminist Activism Aliette Lambert and Ana-Isabel Nölke 24. Big Brother is monitoring: Feminist surveillance studies and digital consumer culture Lauren Gurrieri and Jenna Drenten 25. Seeking Safety and Solidarity Through Self-Documentation: Debating the Power of the Self(ie) in Contemporary Feminist Culture Maggie Matich, Rachel Ashman and Elizabeth Parsons Section 6: Feminist Futures: Problems, Priorities and Predictions 26. How the Economic Sex/Gender System Excludes Women from International Markets Linda Scott 27. The Politics of Epistemic Marginality: Testimonies-In-Opposition Benedetta Cappellini and Martina Hutton 28. Women Who Work: The Limits of the Neoliberal Feminist Paradigm Catherine Rottenberg 29. Putting Pornography on the Marketing Agenda: A Radical Feminist Centring of Harm for Women’s Marketplace Inequality Laura McVey, Meagan Tyler and Lauren Gurrieri 30. Manifesting Feminist Marketing Futures: Undertaking A ‘Visionary’ Inventory ULMS Feminist Collective
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