Book contents
- Market Studies
- Market Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Multiple Pasts, Presents and Futures of Markets and Market Studies
- Part I Market Designs and Market Misfires
- Part II Post-Performative Approaches to Studying Markets
- Part III Valuation
- Part IV Markets in Motion: Places and Spaces
- Part V The Secret Life of Market Studies Methods
- Part VI Broadening the Perspectives in Market Studies
- Chapter 24 What about Gender? An Invitation to Market Studies Scholars
- Chapter 25 Marketing Work and Labour
- Chapter 26 Market System Dynamics: Key Processes, Biases and Research Opportunities
- Chapter 27 A Vocabulary for Analysing Market Change Processes
- Part VII Future (Im)Perfect Markets
- Index
- References
Chapter 24 - What about Gender? An Invitation to Market Studies Scholars
from Part VI - Broadening the Perspectives in Market Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: aN Invalid Date NaN
- Market Studies
- Market Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Multiple Pasts, Presents and Futures of Markets and Market Studies
- Part I Market Designs and Market Misfires
- Part II Post-Performative Approaches to Studying Markets
- Part III Valuation
- Part IV Markets in Motion: Places and Spaces
- Part V The Secret Life of Market Studies Methods
- Part VI Broadening the Perspectives in Market Studies
- Chapter 24 What about Gender? An Invitation to Market Studies Scholars
- Chapter 25 Marketing Work and Labour
- Chapter 26 Market System Dynamics: Key Processes, Biases and Research Opportunities
- Chapter 27 A Vocabulary for Analysing Market Change Processes
- Part VII Future (Im)Perfect Markets
- Index
- References
Summary
Gender remains absent from the agenda of Market Studies. This chapter asks (1) why gender is absent, (2) why Market Studies should bother with gender, and (3) how Market Studies scholars might go about incorporating questions of gender in their research. The chapter traces the roots of the field’s avoidance of gender issues to the idea that gender is either a problematic or an unnecessary concept. The chapter further suggests that studying the co-performation of markets and gender promises to lead to an improved understanding of both gender and markets. Imagining avenues for future research, the chapter seeks inspiration in ethnomethodological theories of gender and Butler’s theory of gender performativity as well as proposes the strategy of seeking constructivist answers to feminist questions.
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- Market StudiesMapping, Theorizing and Impacting Market Action, pp. 405 - 415Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024