Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Craig Thompson, Zeynep Arsel (2004)
The Starbucks Brandscape and Consumers' (Anticorporate) Experiences of GlocalizationJournal of Consumer Research, 31
M. Viswanathan, Roland Gau (2005)
Functional Illiteracy and Nutritional Education in the United States: A Research-Based Approach to the Development of Nutritional Education Materials for Functionally Illiterate ConsumersJournal of Macromarketing, 25
W. Wells (1993)
Discovery-oriented consumer research.Journal of Consumer Research, 19
C. Katz (1994)
Playing the Field: Questions of Fieldwork in GeographyThe Professional Geographer, 46
P. Bourdieu (1989)
The Corporatism of the Universal: The Role of Intellectuals in the Modern WorldTelos, 1989
David Mick (2006)
MEANING AND MATTERING THROUGH TRANSFORMATIVE CONSUMER RESEARCH
V. Turner (1975)
Dramas, Fields, and Metaphors: Symbolic Action in Human Society
H. Bhabha
Translator translated
D. Smith
To what extent is the geographer's world the ‘real world’?
R. Oldenburg (1999)
The Great Good Place
P. Routledge (1996)
The Third Space as Critical EngagementAntipode, 28
R. Hill
Service provision through public‐private partnerships: an ethnography of service delivery to homeless teenagers
Barbara Czarniawska, C. Mazza (2003)
Consulting as a Liminal SpaceHuman Relations, 56
D. Fuller, R. Kitchin
Radical theory/critical praxis: academic geography beyond the academy?
R. Belk (2005)
Exchange Taboos From an Interpretive PerspectiveJournal of Consumer Psychology, 15
V. Turner (1971)
The Ritual Process: Structure and Anti-Structure
S. Khan
Muslim Women: Creating a North American Identity
V. Turner (1967)
The Forest of Symbols: Aspects of Ndembu Ritual
G. Spivak, S. Harasym (1990)
The Post-Colonial Critic
L. Hudson, J. Ozanne
Alternative ways of seeking knowledge
A. Appadurai
Grassroots globalization and research imagination
A. Gennep (1960)
The rites of passage
P. Bourdieu
Homo Academicus
K. Halfacree
I could only do wrong
Duncan Fuller (1999)
Part of the action, or ‘going native’? Learning to cope with the ‘politics of integration’Area, 31
L. English (2005)
Third-Space Practitioners: Women Educating for Justice in the Global SouthAdult Education Quarterly, 55
Ian Maxey (1999)
Beyond boundaries? Activism, academia, reflexivity and researchArea, 31
Heidi Nast (1994)
Women in the Field: Critical Feminist Methodologies and Theoretical Perspectives*The Professional Geographer, 46
H. Nast
Opening remarks on ‘Women in the field’
Homi Bhabha (1994)
The Location of Culture
L. Hudson, J. Ozanne (1988)
Alternative Ways of Seeking Knowledge in Consumer ResearchJournal of Consumer Research, 14
P. Bourdieu
The role of the intellectual in the modern world
R. Hill (2002)
Service Provision through Public-Private PartnershipsJournal of Service Research, 4
L. Peñaloza, M. Gilly (1999)
Marketer Acculturation: The Changer and the ChangedJournal of Marketing, 63
L. Maxey
Moving beyond from within
U. Hannerz (1990)
Cosmopolitans and Locals in World CultureTheory, Culture & Society, 7
Joel Cohen, Americus Reed (2006)
A Multiple Pathway Anchoring and Adjustment (MPAA) Model of Attitude Generation and RecruitmentJournal of Consumer Research, 33
Elizabeth Sauer (2009)
The Postcolonial CriticSouth Asian Review, 30
Craig Thompson, S. Tambyah (1999)
Trying to Be CosmopolitanJournal of Consumer Research, 26
L. English
Identity, hybridity, and third space: complicating the lives of international adult educators
Purpose – This paper seeks to begin a meaningful dialogue on the concept of third space, or “in‐between space”, within the marketing discipline. In the context of scholarly research, third space exists between the academy and places of research, and applies to research agendas involving businesses and consumers in emerging and/or subsistence markets, where study findings often carry significant implications for both theory development and social action. The paper therefore aims to facilitate discussion of defining third space in the context of marketing and to explore its implications for scholars and the academy as a whole. Design/methodology/approach – By reviewing literature from diverse disciplines, the paper explores how occupying a third space may not always be momentary or short‐lived, as it is most often characterized. Instead, marketing scholars with enduring obligations both to the social action of their work in emerging markets and to the theoretical contributions of their work may enact a third space in ways that make it less transitory. Findings – The paper introduces three areas (i.e. researcher identity, researcher context, research methods) and the corresponding themes of rediscovering the researcher, living in the global world, and (re)searching epistemologies, ontologies, and methodologies to begin an examination of third‐space marketing scholars. Originality/value – The issues raised in the paper both respond and contribute to calls for a broader study of culture and business in transformative ways. Moreover, they provide a good starting‐point for further discussion and research on third space by highlighting that the very things one studies indeed affect current ways of theorizing and by reinforcing the need to understand the role of scholars in giving voice to the people and businesses they research.
Journal of Business and Industrial Marketing – Emerald Publishing
Published: Aug 1, 2008
Keywords: Students; Emerging markets; Research
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.