Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

Rethinking Marketing Douglas Brownlie

Rethinking Marketing By Douglas Brownlie

Rethinking Marketing by Douglas Brownlie


$199.09
Condition - New
Only 2 left

Summary

This volume on marketing as a field of study, research and practice proposes ways forward for the discipline and profession. The contributors cover issues in contemporary marketing, including: marketing philosophy, marketing ethics, the marketing profession, and marketing teaching and research.

Rethinking Marketing Summary

Rethinking Marketing: Towards Critical Marketing Accountings by Douglas Brownlie

`This is an important text. It brings together critical reflections on the disciplines contribution in terms of theory, practice and pedagogy and as such is equally as insightful and challenging as some of its recent predecessors (eg Brown et al 1996; Brown and Turley 1997; Brown 1998). The book represents a useful point of departure for those setting off on their own critical journeys and, thus, it should be included on the reading lists of all those carrying out masters or doctoral research in marketing - Journal of Marketing Management

This book provides a challenging and stimulating coverage of a broad range of key issues in contemporary marketing - such as marketing philosophy, marketing ethics, the marketing profession, and marketing teaching and research - through an innovative dialogue among some of the most renowned international scholars in the field .

Rethinking Marketing Reviews

`This is an important text. It brings together critical reflections on the disciplines contribution in terms of theory, practice and pedagogy and as such is equally as insightful and challenging as some of its recent predecessors (eg Brown et al 1996; Brown and Turley 1997; Brown 1998). The book represents a useful point of departure for those setting off on their own critical journeys and, thus, it should be included on the reading lists of all those carrying out masters or doctoral research in marketing - Journal of Marketing Management

About Douglas Brownlie

Mike Saren previously held chairs in marketing at the universities of Stirling and Strathclyde and was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of the UK Academy of Marketing in July 2007. He was a convener of the marketing streams at the Critical Management Studies Conferences, 1999-2011; and one of the founding editors in 2001 of the journal Marketing Theory (Sage Publications). Also co-editor of books on Rethinking Marketing, (Brownlie et al, 1999, Sage) and Critical Marketing: Defining the Field (Saren et al, Elsevier, 2007). His introductory text is Marketing Graffiti: The View from the Street (Saren, 2006, Butterworth Heinemann). Robert Wensley is Emeritus Professor of Policy and Marketing at the Warwick Business School. Professor at Warwick since 1986 and Chair of the School from 1989 to 1994, and Chair of the Faculty of Social Studies from 1997 to 1999. Most recently Director of the AIM Research initiative from 2004 to 2011. He was previously with RHM Foods, Tube Investments and the London Business School and was visiting Professor at UCLA (twice) and University of Florida. He was Chair of the Council of the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations from 1998 until 2003 and a member of the Sunningdale Institute (2008 -11) He is a Fellow of the British Academy of Management (FBAM), the Chartered Institute of Marketing (FCIM) and The Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS). He was awarded the BAM Richard Whipp Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012 and previously awarded the 1981 and 1988 Alpha Kappa Psi prize for the most outstanding article in the US Journal of Marketing and the Millennium Prize for the best paper in the Journal of Marketing Management He was appointed to the Council of the ESRC from 2001 to 2004 and was a Board member of the ESRC Research Grants Board from 1991 to 1995. He is a member of the Advisory Board of the Warburg Institute and the Academic Advisory Board of the Chartered Management Institute. Over his academic career, he has been involved with consultancy and management development for many major organisations. Richard Whittington teaches strategy at the Said Business School and New College, where he is Millman Fellow in Management

Table of Contents

Marketing Disequilibrium - Douglas Brownlie et al On Redress and Restoration PART ONE: MARKETING PHILOSOPHY Postmodernism - Stephen Brown The End of Marketing? Commentary - Gibson Burrell PART TWO: REDEFINING MARKETS From Marketing to Societing - Bernard Cova When the Link Is More Important than the Thing Exchange, Institutions and Time - Luis Araujo Commentary - Robin Wensley PART THREE: REFRAMING CONSUMERS Symbolic Meaning and Postmodern Consumer Culture - Richard Elliott Its a Matter of Time - David Knights and Pamela Odih The Significance of the Womens Market in Consumption Commentary - Morris Holbrook PART FOUR: MARKETING ETHICS Morality and the Marketplace - Robert Grafton Small An Everyday Story of Consumer Ethics Theory, Ethical Critique and the Experience of Marketing - William P Hetrick and Hector R Lozada Commentary - Peter Binns Commentary - Stephen Fineman PART FIVE: THE MARKETING PROFESSION The Process of Inter-Professional Competition - P[um]aivi Eriksson A Case of Expertise and Politics On the Idolization of Markets and the Denigration of Marketers - Hugh Willmott Some Critical Reflections on a Professional Paradox Commentary - Michael Thomas PART SIX: MARKETING PEDAGOGY Research, Rhetoric and Reality - Sally Dibb and Philip Stern Marketings Trifid Research in Marketing - Gilles Laurent and Bernard Pras Some Trends, Some Recommendations Commentary - Gerry Zaltman

Additional information

NPB9780803974906
9780803974906
0803974906
Rethinking Marketing: Towards Critical Marketing Accountings by Douglas Brownlie
New
Hardback
Sage Publications Ltd
1998-12-30
288
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - Rethinking Marketing