The role of institutions in non-Western contexts in reinforcing West-centric knowledge hierarchies: Towards more self-reflexivity in marketing and consumer research
self-reflexivity;
colonialism;
orientalism;
West-centrism;
Eurocentrism;
non-Western contexts;
social theory development;
knowledge hierarchies;
power relations;
institutions;
JOURNAL LIST;
SECULARISM;
ISLAM;
POLITICS;
CONSUMPTION;
MANAGEMENT;
FETISHISM;
RELIGION;
EGYPT;
IRAN;
D O I:
10.1177/14705931221075371
中图分类号:
F [经济];
学科分类号:
02 ;
摘要:
Critics often associate West-centric knowledge hierarchies in marketing (as well as in business and management studies) with (neo)colonialism, academic journal ranking fetishism, resource scarcity in non-Western societies, and the domination of the English Language in the international scholarly landscape. I advance this debate by examining the role non-Western societies themselves have played in reinforcing the phenomenon. Using the Muslim Middle East as a context, I argue that the coupling of the institutions of state politics and religion during the 20th century has negatively influenced the development of social sciences. I show how unreflexive Islamic civilizational revivalism has paradoxically contributed to the reproduction of the same hegemonic discourse it intended to repudiate. These, I argue, are the outcomes of the institutional arrangements that Western colonial/imperial powers have left behind in subordinate societies. I conclude by inviting researchers in both Western and non-Western contexts to develop a sense of self-reflexivity, one that can help create more consciousness about how what they write can impact upon self and others.