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[Commlist] CFP: Postcolonial Marketing Communication and the Global South
Tue Sep 14 23:02:17 GMT 2021
Call for Papers
Postcolonial Marketing Communication: Images from the Global South
Knowledge Partner: Springer Nature
Editors: Arindam Das (Alliance School of Business, Alliance University,
Bangalore, India); Himadri Roy Chaudhuri (XLRI-Xavier School of
Mangement, Jamshedpur, India)
Ozlem Sandikci Turkdogan (University of Glasgow, Adam Smith Business
School, Scotland, UK)
The Editors invite extended chapter proposals of approximately 350 words
for an edited book focusing on postcolonial marketing communication.
This volume aims to generate an exchange of ideas and insights between
academics and professionals on the role of postcolonialty within the
ambits of marketing, consumer literature, and communication. We welcome
chapter proposals on any aspect of this theme.
Concept Note
The system of hegemonic domination and overpowering influence over the
‘less developed’ countries/cultures exercised through a set of
ideological measures and economic instruments by the more powerful
countries (relatively from the Global North) continues till this very
day. Sartre (1964) noted this trend as the European imperial powers
continued to ideologically dominate most of their former colonies.
Subsequent theorizations by Said, Fanon, Bhabha, Spivak et al. have
thrown significant light on the phenomenon. However, it is not only the
reactionary responses to the European imperialism or colonialism that
comprise of the discursive postcolonial terrain, but even the responses
to the recent neocolonial-capitalist-global power prerogatives that
expand the scope of postcolonialism (Loomba, 2015).
The postcolonial condition (along with its trajectories of hybridity,
ambivalence, mimicry, diaspora, deterritorialization, third space,
orientalism, subalternity, or even the anticolonial resistances, and
decolonial transformations) remains a dominant reality even today in the
context of the larger global politico-economic paradigm. The attempts of
transcending the aftermaths of colonialism and neocolonialism and its
coercive or ideologically regulating processes by the
colonized/subaltern/marginalized subjects are not to be missed. The
normalization of socio-cultural-epistemic violence has always been met
with the postcolonial “transformative reflexes” (McLeod, 2007, 5) that
resist, challenge, negotiate or narrate the imperial/neocolonial
hegemony. Even attempts towards decolonization, in the form of a
“movement for moral justice and political solidarity against
imperialism” (Duara, 2004, 2) or the anti-colonial counterculture of
resistance (Gopal, 2019), are but postcolonial reactionary politics of
insurgencies to imperialism. The more recent attempts at “preventing the
financial powers of the developed countries being used in a way to
impoverish the less developed ones” (Nkrumah, 1965, 30) is an
anti-imperial agenda that owes to the intransigent discourses and
unanswerability of the resistive subjects of the postcolonial condition.
Such post/anti/decolonial reactions are no less to be traced in the way
the marketing tacts of the global south (the concept of the market in
itself being a mimetic adoption of the colonial/imperial/global world
order) communicate to its consumers. The site of marketing communication
in the Global South witnesses the Western tropes of marketing
communication being re-produced and re-presented through a mimetic
subversion that is achieved through the deployment of eclectic tools in
the media. Thus, it is a truism to find how the Global South has
adopted a marketing communication system, in its theorization and
practice, that reflects Western motifs, icons, and narratives (Varman
and Saha 2009), but this time mediated through the modernity of their
own (Chatterjee, 1997). The cultural practices of the marketing
communication of the Global South have been successfully able to
devalorize the ‘innocent’ episteme of the West. The
responsible-responsive politics of the marketing communication of the
Global South problematizes the configurations of western images of the
colonized subjects. The de-universalization of the Western episteme as
propounded in the marketing communication of the (neo)colonizer is made
possible through a nativist turn. Moving beyond the benign ahistoricity
of the Western marketing communications, the marketing communication
discourses from the vantage of postcolonial realities highlight the
experiences of inequities and deep divide. However, it would be wrong to
seek a coeval pan-image of reaction in the marketing creativities from
the Global South to the varied forces of imperialism. When historically
situated, the resentment of the margin in the cultural space of
marketing communication ventilates the “local-native-indigenous reality”
that “has been touched by the morphology of modernism and the dominance
of nationalism and the nation-state” (Radhakrishnan, 2000, 37). Hence,
beyond the slogans of all-pervasive, sweeping globalization, the marcom
from the margin unleashes discursivity by narrating the hegemonic
ideologues of culture, economy, politics, and privilege.
This collection intends to be one of its kind in creating the space for
voices of critical marcom about the Global South. We invite incisive
articles that help to catapult the discourse of marcom beyond the
one-world global, stable, conventional narrative and consciously
complicate cultural interconnectivities using the lens of postcolonial
scholarship. Although, the lens of postcolonialism and marketing
discourses have been effectively used (viz. Kjeldgaard and Askegaard,
2006; Varman and Saha, 2009; Üstüner and Holt, 2010; Sandikci and Ger,
2011; Varman and Belk, 2012; Cova et al., 2013; Varman and Sreekumar,
2015; Tadajewski, et al., 2018; Koegler, 2018), and there has been some
dispersed meditation in the field of marketing images and
postcolonialism (Varman, Cyla, and Sreekumar, 2011; Wulan, 2017;
Ghandeharion and Morteza, 2017; Ghandeharion, 2018; Ghandeharion, 2019),
yet our critical anthology intends to be the first to open a substantial
dialogue in “postcolonial marketing communication”. However, there had
been some noteworthy work on tourism images/advertisement of the Global
South from the postcolonial lens (Britton, 1979; Weightman , 1987;
Echtner and Prasad, 2003; Hall and Tucker, 2004; Hasseler, 2008; Wikes,
2016; Atayi, 2020) that critique the privileged Western gaze, yet this
is too focused an area to contribute to the holistic thesis of
postcolonial marketing communication.
The Present edited volume seeks empirical and conceptual work on such
topics to better understand and analyze the phenomenon of postcolonial
marketing communication, how it is experienced, and its impact on Global
South will be given preference. For empirical papers, all methods will
be considered. The editors welcome submissions from academics and
researchers in the field of Cultural Studies, Critical Communication,
Marketing, Consumer Research, and Macromarketing. Please consult the
suggestive list (indicative not exhaustive) of topics below:
1. Marketing communication and the Imperial
History/Genealogy/Archaeology
2. Marketing Communication and the Narratives of Nationalism
3. Marketing Communication and the Subaltern Cultural Politics
4. Marketing Communication and Ethnonationalism
5. Aboriginal/Fourth World Marketing Communication
6. Can the Subaltern Speak through Marketing Communication?
7. Marketing Communication and its Fragments
8. Provincializing Marketing Communication
9. Dalit Marketing Communication
10. Diasporic Marketing Communication
11. Marketing Communication and Postcolonial Displacements
12. Borders, Nation-State and Marketing Communication
13. Marketing Communication and the Black Identity
14. Marketing Communication and Nativism
15. Marketing Communication and Issues of Postcolonial Gender Identity
16. Marketing Communication and Digital Postcolonialism
17. Marketing Communication and Decolonization
18. Marketing Communication and Anti-colonialism
19. Marketing Communication, Disparities, and Capitalism/Globalization
20. Marketing Communication and Whiteness Studies
Email IDs for submission of Abstracts (350 words)
Arindam Das: (arindam.das /at/ alliance.edu.in)
Himadri Roy Chaudhuri: (himadri /at/ xlri.ac.in)
Ozlem Sandikci Turkdogan: (Ozlem.SandikciTurkdogan /at/ glasgow.ac.uk)
Key Date
Last date of submission of Abstracts: 20 October 2021
Decision on Abstract: 10 November 2021
Last date for full Paper submission: 15 February 2022
Works cited:
Atayi, H. (2020). “Unlocking the garden of Eden: a postcolonial reading
of tourists’ and locals’ image of Seychelles.” Diss. Leicester:
University of Leicester.
file:///C:/Users/arindam.das/Downloads/2020AtayiHPhD.pdf.
Britton, Robert A. (1979). “The image of the Third World in tourism
marketing.” Annals of Tourism Research. 6(3): 318–329.
Chatterjee, Partha. (1997). Our Modernity. Rotterdam/Dakar: SEPHIS
CODESRIA. https://ccs.ukzn.ac.za/files/partha1.pdf.
Cova, Bernard., Maclaran, Pauline., and Bradshaw, Alan. (2013).
‘‘Rethinking consumer culture theory from the postmodern to the
communist horizon.’’ Marketing Theory. 13 (2): 213-25.
Duara, Prasenjit. (2004). “Introduction: the decolonization of Asia and
Africa in the twentieth century.” Decolonization: Perspectives from then
and Now. Ed. Prasenjit Duara. London and New York: London.
Echtner, C.M. and Prasad, P. (2003). “The context of third world tourism
marketing.” Annals of Tourism Research. 30(3): 660-82.
Ghandeharion, Azra., and Yazdanjoo, Morteza. (2017). “Governmental
discourses in advertising on Iran’s state television.” CLCWeb:
Comparative Literature and Culture, 19(3): 2–9.
Ghandeharion, Arza. (2018). “Iranian advertisements: a postcolonial
semiotic reading.” Kasetsart Journal of Social Sciences. 39(2): 334-42.
Ghandeharion, Arza. (2019). “How detergent advertisements can bleach
national identity: postcolonial content analysis of Iranian TV
advertisements.” Cogent Arts and Humanities. 6(1): 1-17.
doi.10.1080/23311983.2019.1626204.
Gopal, Priyamvada. Insurgent Empire: Anticolonial Resistance and British
Dissent. London and New York: London.
Hall, M.C. and Tucker, H. (2004). Tourism and Postcolonialism: Contested
Discourses, Identities and Representations. Eds. London: Routledge.
Hasseler, T. A. (2008). “The promise of tourism: colonial imagery in
advertising.” The Radical Teacher. 82: 19-24.
Kjeldgaard, Dannie., and Askegaard, Søren. (2006). “The glocalization of
youth culture: the global Youth segment as structures of common
difference.” Journal of Consumer Research. 33(2): 231-47.
Koegler, Caroline. (2018). Critical Branding: Postcolonial Studies and
the Market. London and New York: Routledge.
Loomba, Ania. (2015). Colonialism/Postcolonialism. 3rd end. London and
New York: Routledge.
McLeod. John. (2007). “Introduction.” The Routledge Companion to
Postcolonial Studies. Ed. John McLeod. London and New York: Routledge. 1-18.
Nkrumah, Kwame. (1965). Neo-Colonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism.
London: Nelson Books.
Radhakrishnan, R. (2000). “Postmodern and the rest of the world.” The
Pre-occupation of Postcolonial Studies. Eds. Fawzia Afzal-Khan and
Kalpana Seshadri-Crooks. Duke University Press: London and Durham. 37-70.
Sartre, Jean-Paul. (1964). Colonialism and Neocolonialism, translated by
Steve Brewer, Azzedine Haddour, Terry McWilliams; Paris: Routledge.
Sandikci, Ozlem., and Ger, Güliz. (2011). “Islam, consumption and
marketing: going beyond the essentialist approach.” Handbook of Islamic
Marketing. Eds. Özlem Sandıkcı and Gillian Rice. Cheltenham (UK): Edward
Elgar. 484-502.
Tadajewski, Mark., Higgins, Matthew., Denegri-Knott, Janice., and
Varman, Rohit. (2018). Routledge Companion to Critical Marketing.
London: Routledge.
Üstüner, Tuba., and Holt, Douglas B. (2010). “Toward a theory of status
consumption in less industrialized countries.” Journal of Consumer
Research. 37 (1): 37–56.
Varman, Rohit., and Saha, Biswatosh. (2009). “Disciplining the
discipline: understanding postcolonial epistemic ideology in marketing.”
Journal of Marketing Management. 25(7/8): 811–824.
Varman, Rohit., Cayla, Julien., and Sreekumar, Hari. (2011). “Mimicry
and postcolonial advertising.” E-European Advances in Consumer Research.
Vol. 9. Eds. Alan Bradshaw, Chris Hackley, and Pauline Maclaran. Duluth,
MN: Association for Consumer Research. 544.
Varman, Rohit., and Belk, Russell W. (2012). “Consuming postcolonial
shopping malls.” Journal of Marketing Management. 28(1-2): 62-84.
Varman, Rohit., and Sreekumar, Hari. (2015). “Locating the past in its
silence: history and marketing theory in India.” Journal of Historical
Research in Marketing. 7(2): 272-279.
Weightman, B. A. (1987). “Third world tour landscapes.” Annals of
Tourism Research. 14(2): 227–239.
Wikes, K. (2016) “Resurrecting colonialism: tourism in Jamaica during
the nineteenth century and beyond.” In Whiteness, Weddings and Tourism
in the Caribbean. Birmingham: Palgrave Macmillan.
Wulan, Roro Retno. (2017). “The myth of white skin: a postcolonial
review of cosmetic ads in Indonesia.” International Conference on
Communication and Media: An International Communication Association
Regional Conference (i-COME’16). doi:10.1051/shsconf/20173300048.
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