75 research outputs found

    Where spirituality and religion meet gender and sexuality::Towards a research agenda for intersectional marketing theory

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    During a roundtable discussion at the 2022 GENMAC Conference, a group of researchers specializing in religiosity and spiritual consumption, using examples from their own fieldwork, reflected on how (i) researchers’ subject positioning—including their gender and sexuality—shape fieldwork in multifaceted manners; (ii) investigations of religious/spiritual fields would benefit from a heightened sensitivity to issues of gender and sexuality; and (iii) greater sensitivity to aspects of religion and/or spirituality can help gender and sexuality scholars better understand consumers and markets. Based on the above, in this commentary paper, we call for intersectional reflexivity, attention to vulnerability and discomfort during fieldwork, and critical sensitivity to the religious “context of context” during theorization. Furthermore, we argue that specific spiritual/religious imaginaries can foster new research approaches that can contribute to more nuanced fieldwork and theorization in marketing and consumer research.</p

    Reframing gender and feminist knowledge construction in marketing and consumer research: missing feminisms and the case of men and masculinities

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    Gender has been theorised and studied in many ways and across different disciplines. Although a number of these theorisations have been recognised and adopted in marketing and consumer research, the significance of feminism in knowledge construction has largely remained what we would call ‘unfinished’. Based on a critical reframing of gender research in marketing and consumer research, in dialogue with feminist theory, this article offers theoretical and practical suggestions for how to reinvigorate these research efforts. The analysis highlights dominant theorisations of gender, relating to gender as variable, difference and role; as fundamental difference and structuring; and as cultural and identity constructions. This reframing emphasises various neglected or ‘missing feminisms’, including queer theory; critical race, intersectional and transnational feminisms; material-discursive feminism; and critical studies on men and masculinities. A more detailed discussion of the latter, as a relatively new, growing and politically contentious area, is further developed to highlight more specifically which feminist and gender theories are mainly in use in marketing and consumer research and which are little or not used. In the light of this, it is argued that marketing and related disciplines have thus far largely neglected several key contemporary gender and feminist theorisations, particularly those that centre on gender power relations. The potential impact of these theoretical frames on transdisciplinary studies in marketing and consumer research and research agenda(s) is discussed

    Servizi online e virtualitĂ  delle manifestazioni fieristiche italiane: un'analisi empirica

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    Il saggio presenta un'analisi dei servizi offerti tramite WEB dagli Organizzatori fieristici italiani, mettendoli a confronto con un benchmark internazional

    CYTO-MORPHOLOGICAL ALTERATIONS INDUCED BY SURFACTANTS

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    The biological effects of an anionic synthetic surfactant (ABS) and a non-ionic surfactant (Citowett) were evaluated using roots of onion bulbs (Allium cepa L.). Three parameters were studied: (1) root elongation, (2) the mitotic index, and (3) chromosome aberrations. The effects of increasing concentrations of surfactants were: (1) reduction in root length; (2) decrease in mitotic index and (3) induction of a high level of chromosome aberrations. The effects of ABS and Citowett suggest caution with regard to inappropriate use of these substances
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