1. Introduction: Unravelling Complexities at the Commercial/Spiritual Interface Diego Rinallo, Linda Scott and Pauline Maclaran Part I: Marketers’ Sacralisation of the Mundane 2. When Sacred Objects Go B®a(n)d: Fashion Rosaries and the Contemporary Linkage of Religion and Commerciality Diego Rinallo, Stefania Borghini, Gary Bamossy, Robert V. Kozinets 3. Theology Meets the Marketplace: The Discursive Formation of the Halal Market in Turkey Elif Izberk-Bilgin 4. No Gods. No Masters? The "New Atheist" Movement and the Commercialization of Unbelief Mary Johnstone-Louis Part II: Consumers’ Search for Spiritual Meanings in Consumption of the Mundane 5. The Sacred in Consumer Culture Russell Belk 6. Consuming Spirituality and the Spirituality of Consuming Media Narratives: Why Vampirism, Why Twilight, Why Now? Margo Buchanan-Oliver and Hope Jensen Schau 7. The Devil has all the Best Brands: Raising Hell in a House of Horrors Stephen Brown 8. Locating the Sacred in Consumer Culture: Championing Colin Campbell’s Easternization of the West Thesis Alan Bradshaw Part III: The Commodification of the Spiritual 9. The Veneration of Relics at Glastonbury Abbey in the Middle Ages Robin Croft 10. Branding Faith and Managing Reputations Mara Einstein 11. SMS a Marriage Proposal: Single Women Ministries in Kenya’s Religious Marketplace Catherine Dolan Part IV: The Consumption of Spiritual Goods 12. Framing Sacred Places and Possessions: Pilgrims at St. Brigid’s Holy Well Darach Turley 13. Materializing the Spiritual – Investigating the Role of Marketplace in Creating Opportunities for the Consumption of Spiritual Experiences Richard Kedzior 14. Consuming the Mists and Myths of Avalon: A Case Study of Pligrimage in Glastonbury Linda Scott and Pauline Maclaran Part V: Issues of Method and Representation 15. Reflections of a Scape Artist: Discerning Scapus in Contemporary Worlds John F. Sherry 16. Spirituality as Introspection and Introspection as Spirituality in Consumer Research Stephen Gould 17. The Autothemataludicization Challenge: Spiritualizing Consumer Culture Through Playful Communal Co-Creation Robert V. Kozinets and John F. Sherry, Jr. Notes on Contributors Notes Index
Diego Rinallo is an Assistant Professor of Marketing at Università
Bocconi, Milan. His research interests include consumer culture,
fashion, masculinities, and spirituality. His work has been
published in international outlets such as the Journal of
Marketing, the Journal of Business Research, Industrial Marketing
Management, the Journal of Business, and Industrial Marketing.
Linda Scott is DP World Chair for Entrepreneurship and Innovation
at the University of Oxford. She has written extensively on
advertising, consumption, and women’s economic issues. She is
editor of the Advertising & Society Review. Her current research
interest is women’s empowerment in emerging markets.
Pauline Maclaran is Professor of Marketing and Consumer Research at
Royal Holloway, University of London. Pauline’s research interests
focus on cultural aspects of contemporary consumption. She has
co-edited various books and is Co-editor in Chief of Marketing
Theory, a journal that promotes alternative and critical
perspectives in marketing and consumer behaviour.
"Consumption and Spirituality provides a much-needed overview of a badly-neglected aspect of consumer experiences. Whereas previous studies have focused on various issues related to religion, theology, or expanded states of consciousness, not until now have we had a sustained attempt to consider the interaction between these facets of contemporary life." – Morris Holbrook, Columbia University, USA
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