Fear, Desperation, Apathy, and Resilience: How Can Brazil Provide Insights for Consumer Research in Times of Turbulent Emotions

Resumen

This think piece discusses how the contemporary context of polycrisis provokes negative emotions that could lead to more critical research in marketing and in consumer studies in three themes: technology, backlash on diversity and debt. It also argues for paths for developing resilience in such scenarios by taking inspiration from Brazil, a country in which several people have already lived the end of the world as we know it.

Descargas

La descarga de datos todavía no está disponible.

Biografía del autor/a

Maria Carolina Zanette, Neoma Business School, France

Associate Professor of Marketing at Neoma Business School, France. Former director of the M.Sc. in Digital and Data Marketing, she now directs the M.Sc. Communication d’Entreprise in the same institution. She writes mainly about the intersection of gender and technology. Her work has been published in journals like the Journal of Marketing, Sociology, Marketing Theory, and Journal of Marketing Management (where she is part of the Editorial Board), among others.

Citas

Aboelenien, A., Arsel, Z., & Cho, C. H. (2021). Passing the buck versus sharing responsibility: the roles of government, firms, and consumers in marketplace risks during COVID-19. Journal of the Association for Consumer Research, 6(1), 149-158.

Ahmed, S. (2020). Queer phenomenology: Orientations, objects, others. Duke University Press.

Arcuri, A G; Veludo-de-Oliveira, T; Larsen, G. (2025) Beyond Taboo: Exploring Barriers to Sexual Health Consumption Through Decolonial Feminist Lenses. Proceedings of ACR Latin America 2025 (forthcoming)

Arcuri, A.G; Larsen, G and Veludo-de-Oliveira, T. (2024) Using Decolonial Feminism and Border Thinking to Dismantle Atmospheres of Silence in the Global South. Working paper presented in Genmac Conference 2024 in Edinburgh, Scotland (UK).

Arsel, Z., Zanette, M. C., & da Rocha Melo, C. (2024). Sponsored Content as an Epistemic Market Object: How Platformization of Brand–Creator Partnerships Disrupts Valuation, Coproduction, and the Relationship Between Market Actors. Journal of Marketing, 00222429241296459.

Arsel, Z. (2025). Platform capture: a review of the state of the art of research on platforms and a research agenda. Journal of Marketing Management, 1-21.

Bender, E. M., & Hanna, A. (2025). The AI Con: How to fight big tech’s hype and create the future we want. Random House.

Bender, E. M., Gebru, T., McMillan-Major, A., & Shmitchell, S. (2021, March). On the dangers of stochastic parrots: Can language models be too big? In Proceedings of the 2021 ACM conference on fairness, accountability, and transparency (pp. 610-623).

Brum, E. (2021). Banzeiro òkòtó: uma viagem à Amazônia centro do mundo. Companhia das Letras.

Dallolio, A. S., Zanette, M. C., & Brito, E. P. Z. (2025). Symbolic power among preteens: consumption competences and social media influence. European Journal of Marketing.

Drenten, J., Gurrieri, L., Huff, A. D., & Barnhart, M. (2024). Curating a consumption ideology: Platformization and gun influencers on Instagram. Marketing theory, 24(1), 91-122.

Drenten, J., Harrison, R. L., & Pendarvis, N. J. (2023). More gamer, less girl: Gendered boundaries, tokenism, and the cultural persistence of masculine dominance. Journal of Consumer Research, 50(1), 2-24.

Fontenelle, I. A. (2024). Ancestral future: on consumption, ethics and the Anthropocene. Futures, 164, 103478.

Fracalanzza, F. P., Campos, R. D., & Suarez, M. C. (2024). Influence Building in Stigmatized Contexts: Women’s Domestic Work as a Platform for Digital Content. BAR-Brazilian Administration Review, 21(suppl 1), e240125.

Gebru, T., & Torres, É. P. (2024). The TESCREAL bundle: Eugenics and the promise of utopia through artificial general intelligence. First Monday.

Graeber, D. (2014). Debt: the first 5,000 years, updated and expanded. Melville House.

Hao, K. (2025). Empire of AI: Inside the reckless race for total domination. Random House.

Hoeger, L.K ; Mariia Lobanova, and Tina M. Lowrey. “You’re Not On Your Own, Kid: Online Communication Emboldens Offline Gift-Giving and Friendship,” Netnocon, Marseille, France, May 2025.

Klein, N. (2024). Doppelganger: A trip into the mirror world. Random House.

Kotler, P. (2024). Lifetime in marketing: Lessons learned and the way ahead. Journal of Marketing.

Leandro, J. C., & Botelho, D. (2025). From Order to Chaos: How Consumers Lose Control of Risks (and of Themselves). Journal of Consumer Research, ucaf026.

Magalhães Lopes, M., Zanette, M.C., & Fontenelle, I. (2024). Brazil: a reorientation of the centre of the world – from the future. Consumption, Markets, & Culture.

Magalhães Lopes, M. (2023). Marking humans for consumption, whilst erasing others: Affective becomings and the workings of (dis)comfort. Journal of Consumer Culture 23(4): 949–970

Magalhães Lopes, M., Brondino-Pompeo, K., & Carvalho de Morais, I. (2024). Embracing cuir possibilities: Can ‘consumer researchers’ drop the consumer?. Marketing Theory, 14705931251357983.

Mandalaki, E. (2025). A feminist ethics of care for the embodied organizing of solidarity: Lessons from the refugee crisis in Greece. Journal of Business Ethics, 1-15.

Mollick, Ethan (2024). Co-intelligence: Living and working with AI. WH Allen.

Narayanan, A., & Kapoor, S. (2024). AI snake oil: What artificial intelligence can do, what it can’t, and how to tell the difference. In AI Snake Oil. Princeton University Press.

Pirani, D., & Daskalopoulou, A. (2022). The queer manifesto: Imagining new possibilities and futures for marketing and consumer research. Marketing Theory, 22(2), 293-308.

Rinallo, D. et al.. (2023). Where spirituality and religion meet gender and sexuality: toward a research agenda for intersectional marketing theory. Marketing Theory, 23(4), 725-736.

Rosenthal, B., & Airoldi, M. (2024). Consumer morality formation on social media platforms: the case of guns in Brazil. Journal of macromarketing, 44(1), 178-198.

Shamayleh, G., & Arsel, Z. (2025). Digital Affective Encounters: The Relational Role of Content Circulation on Social Media. Journal of Consumer Research, ucaf023.

Varoufakis, Y. (2023). Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism. Brooklyn, NY: Melville House.

Wynn-Williams, S. (2025). Careless people: A cautionary tale of power, greed, and lost idealism. Flatiron Books.

Zakrzewska, B. (2025). Paddington in Peru: A hard stare at cultural appropriation. Organization, 13505084251334998.

Zanette, M. C., Blikstein, I., & Visconti, L. M. (2019). Intertextual virality and vernacular repertoires: Internet memes as objects connecting different online worlds. Revista de administraçao de empresas, 59(3), 157-169.

Zanette, M.C., & Scaraboto, D. (2024). Being versus Getting a Brazilian Colonial Imaginaries of Sexuality. In: Daskalopoulou, A., Pirani, D., and Ostberg, J. (Eds.). Sexuality in Marketing and Consumption: Queer Theory, Feminist Research, and Intersectionality. Taylor & Francis.

Publicado
2025-09-26
Cómo citar
Zanette, M. C. (2025). Fear, Desperation, Apathy, and Resilience: How Can Brazil Provide Insights for Consumer Research in Times of Turbulent Emotions. Revista Interdisciplinar De Marketing, 15(2), 313-318. https://doi.org/10.4025/rimar.v15i2.78903