Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
(2007)
Addressing the Muslim market
F. Guindi (1999)
Veil: Modesty, Privacy and Resistance
Ozlem Sandikci, G. Rice (2011)
Handbook of Islamic Marketing
F. Mernissi, M. Lakeland (1993)
The Veil and the Male Elite: A Feminist Interpretation of Women's Rights in Islam
Noah Venkatesh (1995)
Ethnoconsumerism: A New Paradigm to Study Cultural and Cross-Cultural Consumer Behavior
Özlem Sandıkçı, G. Ger (2007)
Constructing and Representing the Islamic Consumer in TurkeyFashion Theory, 11
(2002)
In-between modernities and postmodernities: investigating Turkish consumptionscape
N. Esso, S. Dibb
Religious contrasts in consumer decision behavior
Jonathan Wilson, Jonathan Liu (2010)
Shaping the Halal into a brandJournal of Islamic Marketing, 1
Abul الحسن, Abdelkader شاشي, Salma عبداللطيف (2008)
Islamic Marketing Ethics and Its Impact on Customer Satisfaction in the Islamic Banking Industry القيم الإسلامية للتسويق وأثرها في كسب رضا العميل في صناعة الصيرفة الإسلامية, 21
Reina Lewis (2010)
Marketing Muslim Lifestyle: A New Media GenreJournal of Middle East Women's Studies, 6
Banu Gökarıksel, A. Secor (2010)
Between Fashion and Tesettür: Marketing and Consuming Women's Islamic DressJournal of Middle East Women's Studies, 6
F. Osella, Caroline Osella (2009)
Muslim entrepreneurs in public life between India and the Gulf: making good and doing goodJournal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 15
(2008)
Marketers must engage with the Muslim consumer
Ozlem Sandikci, G. Ger (2010)
Veiling in Style: How Does a Stigmatized Practice Become Fashionable?Journal of Consumer Research, 37
Loong Wong (2007)
Market Cultures, the Middle Classes and Islam: Consuming the Market?Consumption Markets & Culture, 10
Rodney Wilson (2006)
Islam and businessStrategic Direction, 48
B.A. Alserhan
On Islamic branding: brands as good deeds
A. Rehman, M. Shabbir (2010)
The relationship between religiosity and new product adoptionJournal of Islamic Marketing, 1
A. Venkatesh
Ethnoconsumerism: a new paradigm
F. Mernissi
The Veil and the Male Elite
Rafael Reyes-Ruiz (2003)
Latinos, Inc.: The Marketing and Making of a PeopleAmerican Anthropologist, 105
M. Saeed, Z. Ahmed, Syeda-Masooda Mukhtar (2001)
International Marketing Ethics from an Islamic Perspective: A Value-Maximization ApproachJournal of Business Ethics, 32
E. Said
Orientalism
J. Esposito (1984)
Islam and politics
A. Boubekeur (2005)
Cool and Competitve Muslim Culture in the West
G. Rice (1999)
Islamic Ethics and the Implications for BusinessJournal of Business Ethics, 18
B. Turner (1996)
Orientalism, postmodernism, and globalism
A. Melucci (1996)
Challenging Codes: Collective Action in the Information Age
Emin Adaş (2006)
The Making of Entrepreneurial Islam and the Islamic Spirit of CapitalismJournal for Cultural Research, 10
(2009)
Halal: buying Muslim”, May 25, available at: www.time.com/time/magazine/ article/0,9171,1898247,00.html
JWT
Understanding the Islamic consumer
D. Burton (2002)
Towards a Critical Multicultural Marketing TheoryMarketing Theory, 2
U. Yavas, S. Tuncalp (1984)
Perceived Risk in Grocery Outlet Selection: A Case Study in Saudi ArabiaEuropean Journal of Marketing, 18
N. Zakaria, Asmat-Nizam Abdul-Talib (2010)
Applying Islamic market‐oriented cultural model to sensitize strategies towards global customers, competitors, and environmentJournal of Islamic Marketing, 1
T. Adams (2005)
Book Review: How Brands Become Icons: The Principles of Cultural BrandingJournal of Advertising Research, 45
G. Schmidt (2005)
Islamic Activism: A Social Movement Theory ApproachContemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 34
A. Bayat (2005)
Islamism and Social Movement TheoryThird World Quarterly, 26
Arlene Davila (2001)
Latinos, Inc.: The Marketing and Making of a People
(1997)
The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order
Ömer Demir, M. Acar, M. Toprak (2004)
Anatolian Tigers or Islamic Capital: Prospects and ChallengesMiddle Eastern Studies, 40
D. Eickelman
The study of Islam in local contexts
(2008)
Spotlighting Europe’s Muslim consumers
Ogilvy and Mather
Brands, Islam and the new Muslim consumer
J. Yusuf (2010)
Ethical implications of sales promotion in Ghana: Islamic perspectiveJournal of Islamic Marketing, 1
(2006)
The effect of religiosity on shopping orientation: an exploratory study in Malaysia
Amina Yaqin (2007)
Islamic Barbie: The Politics of Gender and PerformativityFashion Theory, 11
M. Khan (1995)
Essays in Islamic economics
K. Abdullah, Mohd. Ahmad (2010)
Compliance to Islamic marketing practices among businesses in MalaysiaJournal of Islamic Marketing, 1
B. Barber (1996)
Jihad vs. McWorld
T. Kuran (2004)
Islam and Mammon: The Economic Predicaments of IslamismForeign Affairs, 83
M. Yavuz (2004)
Opportunity spaces, identity, and Islamic meaning in Turkey
V. Nasr
Forces of Fortune
C. Prahalad, Harvey Fruehauf (2004)
The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid
M.N. Siddiqi
Islamic consumer behavior
Nilüfer Göle (2015)
The Voluntary Adoption of Islamic Stigma SymbolsSocial Research: An International Quarterly, 70
A. Adnan (2011)
ISLAMIC CONSUMER BEHAVIOR ( ICB ) : ITS WHY AND WHAT 1
D. Holt
How Brands Become Icons: The Principles of Cultural Branding
N. Delener (1994)
Religious Contrasts in Consumer Decision Behaviour Patterns: Their Dimensions and Marketing ImplicationsEuropean Journal of Marketing, 28
C. Saint-Blancat (2002)
Islam in Diaspora: Between Reterritorialization and ExtraterritorialityInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 26
(2007)
Islam and education in secular Turkey: state policies and the emergence of the Fethullah Gülen Group
Shanon Fitzpatrick (2009)
Covering Muslim Women at the Beach: Media Representations of the BurkiniUCLA Center for the Study of Women
L. Manger (1992)
On the Study of Islam in Local Contexts, 19
Ozlem Sandikci, G. Ger (2011)
Islam, Consumption and Marketing: Going Beyond the Essentialist Approaches
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the reasons underlying the recent interest on Islamic marketing, discusses past research on the topic and offers a future research perspective. Design/methodology/approach – The paper is based on a critical review of the existing literature. It offers ethnoconsumerism as a way to develop a situated understanding of Muslim consumers and businesses. Findings – Two distinct phases, omission and discovery, characterize the existing literature. Omission derives from the stereotyping of Muslims as traditional and uncivilized people and Islam as incompatible with capitalist consumer ideology. Discovery relates to the identification of Muslims as an untapped and viable consumer segment and the increasing visibility of Muslim entrepreneurs. Research limitations/implications – A deeper understanding of Muslim consumers and marketers requires doing away with essentialist approaches that reify difference. Instead of focusing on differences future research needs to pay attention to how such differences play out in the daily lives of consumers and examine the religious, political, cultural and economic resources, forces and tensions that consumers experience and negotiate as they (re)construct and communicate their identities as Muslims. Practical implications – Managers should not assume Muslims to be a homogeneous and preexisting segment. They should focus on the daily practices for which the product may be relevant and generate solutions that will help Muslims live proper Islamic lives. Originality/value – The paper draws attention to the potential problems in carrying out research on Islamic marketing and highlights the dangers of an essentialist perspective.
Journal of Islamic Marketing – Emerald Publishing
Published: Sep 20, 2011
Keywords: Islamic marketing; Muslim consumers; Islamic market segmentation; Essentialism; Halal market; Islam; Ethnography
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.