Subjugated and Disqualified Knowledge in Marketing Theory: Historical Struggles and the Conditions of Repudiation

Palavras-chave: Geopolitics of marketing theory, Marketing theory, Subjugated knowledge, Disqualified knowledge, Conditions of repudiation

Resumo

When worldviews or claims to knowledge become widely accepted and increasingly ossified, this demands the mobilization of critical reflection. It is to be expected that such claims have achieved the status of received wisdom because they serve the interests of some groups, skew power relations, and assist in reaffirming the geopolitical status quo. Attention must thus be devoted to the “geopolitics of marketing theory” and its ramifications. In making this case, we engage with the writings proffered by thinkers from the Global South, whose critique is interlaced with hope, and promises to help make the marketing discipline relevant to most people on this planet, that is, those whose voices have been trammelled and denied in the march of Euro- and Americanocentric modernity.

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Biografia do Autor

Mark Tadajewski, University of York

Honorary Visiting Professor at the University of York, Visiting Professor, Royal Holloway, University of London, the Editor of the Journal of Marketing Management, an Associate Editor of the Journal of Historical Research in Marketing and editor of multiple book series for Routledge.

Publicado
2023-09-24
Como Citar
Tadajewski, M. (2023). Subjugated and Disqualified Knowledge in Marketing Theory: Historical Struggles and the Conditions of Repudiation. Revista Interdisciplinar De Marketing, 13(2), 86-98. https://doi.org/10.4025/rimar.v13i2.67574
Seção
Artigos