2014/2015 BA-BFILO1305U Marketing and Aesthetics
English Title | |
Marketing and Aesthetics |
Course information |
|
Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Mandatory |
Level | Bachelor |
Duration | One Semester |
Course period | Spring |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Study board |
Study Board for BSc/MSc in Business Administration and
Philosophy, BSC
|
Course coordinator | |
|
|
Main academic disciplines | |
|
|
Last updated on 15-08-2014 |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
For each part above there are a number of
learning obejctives that will be checked in the casework excersies
and the final synopsis.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Course content and structure | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
MARKET(ING) AND AESTHETICS; introduction
to marketing and consumption studies for philosophers
1. Introduction to Marketing as a Job, a Function and Discipline.
Marketing is about making firms develop and sell
products and services with high value to customers so the course
starts by an introduction to Marketing as a special profession.
After a short history and “state of the art” orientation to
corporate marketing management; this first part treats the
development of the marketing function in business corporations and
some general models of consumer-, industrial- and financial-markets
for products and services? The part is based on genealogical
marketing-history and textbook “state of the art” descriptions of
professional marketing culture. In addition to readings and
lectures this part will also contain studio based ( at CBS studio)
encounters with marketing professionals. The introductory part will
be designed in cooperation with marketing scholars and
practitioners with the aim of making Fløk students able to
communicate to a marketing community.
2. Three Aesthetic Philosophies relevant to Marketing
This second part takes the previous readings of students
as a starting points. Marx, Smith, Plato, Kant and Bentham/Mill all
have, sometimes conflicting, ideas that might be interpreted
to have special bearing on marketing. A Fløk student may ask why,
for instance, many contemporary continental philosophers,
followingPlato, bash marketing as a lethal form of
sophistry? Is the marketer a threat to the philosopher king? We
also know that modern Marxiananalysis violently condemns
corporate marketing as a powerful capitalist tool for exploiting
and seducing consumers on markets. In fact, as Fløk students
already are ware of, much continental philosophy is actually
marketed as firmly anti-marketing? On the other hand
liberal heirs to ScottishPhilosophers, mostly
with US connections, advocate freedom of markets with minimal
public regulation? But what did Smithreally imply when he
and Humeuse the term Marketing? How are discussions on
democracy connected to marketing like Popperscriticism
ofPlatoas an enemy of an Open Society? Can
Simmel´sphilosophy of money come to grips with
Marxcriticism of markets?
a. Classical Aesthetics; Kant and Kantian philosophy of aesthetic judgment. b. Avant-Garde Aesthetics; art extended to social sculpture via relational aesthetics developed by Beuysand Bourriaud c. Organizational Aesthetics; creation of social markets as aesthetic processes according to Ranciere.
3. Discovering consumption/consumers with aesthetic perspectives.
From a philosophical perspective a consumer is “the
Other” facing the marketer. Marketing aims at co-creating value
with consumers inhabiting different culturesboth
ascitizensand buyerswith legaland
monetary duties and constraints. The third part the course
will focus on studio based work with concrete business cases in
consumer research. The cases will treat household marketing
(consumers goods/services markets), in business-to-business
(purchasers and investors on industrial markets) financial
marketing (buyers of financial products/services) and public and
non-profit marketing (e.g. utility clients or donors of funds).
Cases could be written or created by students in field work
inspired by ethnography.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
The Course starts with a kick off Marketing day
at the CBS studio, presenting the case-companies and opening the
debate on Marketing and Aesthetics.
Part 1. Lectures on Marketing management. Guest lectures by marketing practitioners and scholars. Company visits. And visits to marketing profession events Part 2 Seminars on the three aesthetic perspectives with social scientist and marketing scholars applying aesthetics. Close readings of texts. Part 3 Four living cases presented if possible in in-situ-excursions. Each case will end up in a brief for a consumer field investigation done as group work. If possible the case part 3. should be done in parallel with part 1 and 2. The idea simply being that the casework will evolve under the inspiration of part 1 and 2 and naturally integrate aesthetic philosophy as inspiration for the consumer market research. If possible this should be done in the CBS studio. The Course ends with a common presentation of the cases works if possible to an audience of invited marketing professionals. Then follows the individual examination |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pensum suggestions. Basic Textbooks suggestion: Ellis, N. et.al .2009: Marketing; a critical textbook. London: Sage Hackley, C. 2009: Marketing. A critical introduction. London: Sage Reader with contributions from Brown, S. 1993. Postmodern marketing?, European Journal of Marketing, 27(3), 19-34 Brown, S., 1996. Art or Science? Fifty years of marketing debate. Journal of Marketing Management, 12, 243-267 Bourriaud, N, 2001, Esthetique relationelle, Paris; les presses du reel (English translation) Charters, S. 2006. Aesthetic Products and Aesthetic consumption; a review. Consumption, Markets and Society. Elliott, R. 2004. Making up people: Consumption as a symbolic vocabulary for contruction of identity, in Ekström, K. andf Brembevk, H. Elusive Consumption. Oxford: Berg, 129-143 Firat, F and Venkatesh, A. 1995. Liberatory postmodernism and the re-enchantment of Consumption. Journal of Consumer research. 22(3) 239-267 Figlstein, N. 1996. Markets as politics: a political-cultural approach to Market Insitutions. American Sociological review. 61(4), 656-673 Ford, D. and Håkansson, H. 2013. Competition in business networks. Industrial marketing management, 6(3) 104-209 Gadde, L.,Huemer, L. and Håkansson. 2003 Strategizing in industrial networks. Industrial marketing management Guillet de Monthoux, Pierre. 2004. The art firm; aesthetic management and metaphysical marketing. Palo Alto; Stanford Uniuversity Press Guilletde Monthoux, P. 1985.Marketing by obedience; Kantian regulation by technical standards. in N. Dholakia and J. Arndt edts. Research in Marketing, London: Jai Press Guillet de Monthoux, Pierre. 1994, Moral Philosophy of Management, from Quesnay to Keynes. Armonk; G.F,.Sharpe Hackley, C. 2003. “We are all consumers now…” Rhetorical Strategy and Ideologicla Control in Marketing Management Texts. Journal of Marketing 40(5), 1325-1352 . Holt, D. 2006, Jack Daniel´s America; iconic brands as ideological parasites and proselytizers. Journal of Consumer Culture 6(3), 355-377 Kjellberg, H. and Helgesson, CF. 2007 On the nature of markets and their practices. Marketing Theory 7(3) 13 Kotler, P.,Calder, B. 2012. The gap between the Vision of Marketing and the Reality. MIT Sloan Management 54. Laufer, R. 2009. New rhetoric Empire, Pragmatism, Dogmatism and Sophism. Philsophy and rhetoric, 42(4) 326-348 Laufer, R. Paradeise, C. 1989. Marketing Democracy. Rochester; Transaction Books Nicolas Iglesias, O. and Schultz, M.2013. Building brands together; emergence and outcomes of co-creation. California Management Review, 55(3) 5-26 Penaloza, L. Toulouse N. and Visconti, L.M. 2012. Chapters 14, 26, 27, 28. Marketing Management: a cultural perspective. London: Taylor and Francis Ranciere, J., 2010. The Aesthetic Revolution and its outcomes in Dissensus. London; Continuum Ranciere, J.,From politicis to aesthetics, Paragraph 28(1):13-15 Schau, H. Muniz, A. and Arnould, E. 2009. How brand community practices create value. Journal of Marketing, 73(5), 30-51 Schroeder, J. 1997. Andy Warhol: consumer researcher. Advances in consumer research 24, 476-482 Schroeder, J. 2005. The artist and the brand. Journal of Marketing. 39 (1112) 1291-1305 Schultz, M. and Hatch, M. 2008. Corporate Branding as organizational change. Brandmanager no3 42-7 Sheth, J. and Sisodia, R, 2006. Does marketing need reform? Armonk; ME Sharpe Skålen, P and Hackley, C. 2011, Marketing as practice. Scandinavian Journal of Management. 27(2) Svensson, P. 2007 Producing marketing; Towards a social-phenomenology of marketing work. Marketing Thoery, 7(3); 2 71-290 Thompson, C. 2004 Marketplace Mythology and discourse of power, Journal of Consumer Research, 31(1) 162-180 Welsch, W. 2008. Aesthetics beyond aesthetics, in Halsall , F. et al eds Rediscovering Aesthetics, Palo Alto; Stanford University Press. Usui, K. 2008. The development of Marketing management the case of the usa c1910-1940. Aldershot: Ashgate. |