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Taboos, morality and marketing: towards a conceptual model and illustration

Purpose Drawing on the anthropological literature, this paper aims to develop a model of taboos (morality) that applies to the marketing, consumer behaviour and consumption contexts. Design/methodology/approach The paper is mainly conceptual but illustrates the general premises of the model with a c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of consumer marketing 2019-05, Vol.36 (3), p.393-400
Main Authors: Michelson, Grant, Miller, Rohan
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Purpose Drawing on the anthropological literature, this paper aims to develop a model of taboos (morality) that applies to the marketing, consumer behaviour and consumption contexts. Design/methodology/approach The paper is mainly conceptual but illustrates the general premises of the model with a case study of “dark” tourism and the contemporary marketing of the Auschwitz concentration camp. Findings The paper shows that even extreme taboos can be commodified and traded-off, and that not even the horrific deaths and large-scale suffering that occurred at Auschwitz are “sacred”. This can occur through reframing and seeing the same taboo through different national lens. Research limitations/implications Questions pertaining to consumer morality are relative rather than universalistic, and even the most extreme cases of taboo can still be successfully marketed. Originality/value The paper is among the first to attempt to conceptually design a model and then explain the taboo process as it applies to a marketing and consumption context.
ISSN:0736-3761
2052-1200
DOI:10.1108/JCM-03-2018-2621