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The dark side of marketing communications : critical marketing perspectives / Tim Hill and Pierre McDonagh.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Routledge studies in critical marketingPublisher: Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021Description: ix, 123 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781138587137
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: The dark side of marketing communicationsDDC classification:
  • 658.802 H550d 23
LOC classification:
  • HB501 .H5173 2020
Contents:
Introduction: where are we now? -- Decoding the market logic -- Sport: winners, losers, and the logic of competition -- Corporate social responsibility: corporate utopias, wishful thinking, and the logic of sustainability -- Success, status, and the logic of individualism -- Social progress, economic decline, and the logic of objectivity -- Boredom: digitized '24/7' connectivity and the logic of distraction -- Afterword: how does this end?
Summary: "What fuels capitalism and what stops it from collapsing? Does marketing communications support and sustain the economic and political status quo? This book is not about describing the ways in which businesses can optimize the messages they put across or about adding to the marketing communicator's toolkit. This book argues that marketing communications plays an increasingly important role in bolstering contemporary capitalism. Drawing on conceptualizations of the 'market' from political economy and sociology, it focusses on five logics that underpin and sustain the form of capitalism in which we live: the logic of competition, the logic of sustainability, the logic of individualism, the logic of objectivity, and the logic of distraction. It does this by exploring those arenas which are increasingly dominated by the communicative activities of business: sport, CSR, social media, statistics, and entertainment. Bringing theories from marketing and consumer research, sociology, cultural studies, technology and media studies to bear on marketing communications, this book is necessary reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students and academics who wish to understand the broader role of marketing communications in the reproduction of contemporary capitalism"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Main Library Graduate School Library GRD 658.802 H550d 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1-1 Available 030125

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: where are we now? -- Decoding the market logic -- Sport: winners, losers, and the logic of competition -- Corporate social responsibility: corporate utopias, wishful thinking, and the logic of sustainability -- Success, status, and the logic of individualism -- Social progress, economic decline, and the logic of objectivity -- Boredom: digitized '24/7' connectivity and the logic of distraction -- Afterword: how does this end?

"What fuels capitalism and what stops it from collapsing? Does marketing communications support and sustain the economic and political status quo? This book is not about describing the ways in which businesses can optimize the messages they put across or about adding to the marketing communicator's toolkit. This book argues that marketing communications plays an increasingly important role in bolstering contemporary capitalism. Drawing on conceptualizations of the 'market' from political economy and sociology, it focusses on five logics that underpin and sustain the form of capitalism in which we live: the logic of competition, the logic of sustainability, the logic of individualism, the logic of objectivity, and the logic of distraction. It does this by exploring those arenas which are increasingly dominated by the communicative activities of business: sport, CSR, social media, statistics, and entertainment. Bringing theories from marketing and consumer research, sociology, cultural studies, technology and media studies to bear on marketing communications, this book is necessary reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students and academics who wish to understand the broader role of marketing communications in the reproduction of contemporary capitalism"-- Provided by publisher.

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