Marketscapes. Market between Culture and Globalization

Authors

  • Iris Rittenhofer
  • Martin Nielsen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/hjlcb.v22i43.96873

Abstract

What happens to market communication theory (MCT) when it embraces a global business world? MCT’s applications of the ‘global’ turn out to serve “as a magnifier” for modernity, when we discuss MCT and its conceptions of the market from the perspective of emergent and dynamic cultural theory. We critically discuss the conception of the market, the relation between communication and market and how globalization is integrated into the field. We then interface selected approaches to MCT with cultural approaches to globalization. Finally, we explore and suggest new ways of bringing together market, culture, communication and the global. In the course of these critical discussions, we develop the elements of an alternative conception of the global market as marketscapes. Furthermore, we point to several consequences of our findings for MCT. MCT has to deal with a global market as a concept, that is a way of perceiving and thinking stakeholder activities in a ‘translocal’, post-national and multidirectional perspective. We conclude by pointing out areas for future MC research.

Downloads

Published

2009-08-30

How to Cite

Rittenhofer, I., & Nielsen, M. (2009). Marketscapes. Market between Culture and Globalization. HERMES - Journal of Language and Communication in Business, 22(43), 59–95. https://doi.org/10.7146/hjlcb.v22i43.96873

Issue

Section

THEMATIC SECTION: Critical Understandings of Globalizations in Context