ABSTRACT

In recent years, a critically oriented sub-stream of research on Muslim consumers and businesses has begun to emerge. This scholarship, located both within and outside the marketing field, adopts a socio-culturally situated approach to Islam and investigates the complex and multifaceted intersections between Islam and markets.

This book seeks to reflect various unheard and emerging critical voices from within the Muslim world, and provide a series of critical insights on how, if and why Islam matters to marketing theory and practice. It questions the existing assumptions and polarising discussions which underpin the portrayal of Islam as the ‘other’ of Modernity, while acknowledging that Muslims themselves are partially responsible for creating stereotyped representations of Islam and ‘the Muslim’.

This wide-ranging and insightful collection will advance emerging critical perspectives, and provide new insights that will influence the generation and application of knowledge in the context of Muslim societies. It will open up fresh conversations for scholars in marketing as well as the broader humanities and social sciences.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Islam in consumption, marketing and markets

part I|66 pages

Beyond the brand ‘Islamic'

chapter 1|29 pages

What is in a name that we call ‘Islam’?

A critical inquiry into the semiotic construction of super-brand Ummah

chapter 2|15 pages

Marketing Islam in a ‘double minority' setting

The case of Singapore

part II|58 pages

Islam and Islamic representations in the fashionscape

chapter 4|19 pages

The commercial limits of the Ummah?

National and regional taste distinctions in the modest fashion market 1

chapter 5|21 pages

Images of desire

Creating virtue and value in an Indonesian Islamic lifestyle magazine 1

chapter 6|16 pages

What makes a commodity Islamic?

The case of veiling-fashion in Turkey 1

part III|55 pages

Towards a reflexive account of theorization

chapter 7|15 pages

An Islamic model of marketing ethics

A critical analysis from contemporary perspectives

chapter 9|21 pages

Authenticity, religious identity and consumption

A reflexive (auto)ethnographic account