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Market mutton dressed as ÜberLamb: Diagnosing the commodification of self-overcoming

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posted on 2024-11-20, 14:36 authored by James Cronin, James Fitchett, Jack Coffin
Nietzsche invites us to turn our focus to how subjects seek out what is average rather than what is authentically independent. For marketing theory, this means recognising that while the desire for autonomy and self-determination functions as a seductive and collective narrative for consumer culture generally, it inevitably becomes denatured and delimited to what each individual consumer finds to be most convenient, credible, and practical. Using a Nietzschean toolbox, this paper diagnoses a contemporary malaise in the process of ‘commodified self-overcoming’, whereby subjects are fed the mass-mediated fantasy that they can overcome the symbolic similitude of the majority while remaining comfortably part of the social ‘herd’. We discuss this process using three illustrative archetypes: the inhuman ‘BIG Zombie’, the transhuman ‘Cyborg’, and the all-too-human ‘Slacktivist’. These archetypes reveal how the prospect of overcoming the self and all of its human trappings functions as a core fantasy for consumers, albeit one that is paradoxically produced and supplied by market mechanisms that perpetuate a lasting humanism. We explore the notion of ante-humanism and conclude with implications for the nascent tradition of Terminal Marketing.

History

Author affiliation

College of Business Marketing & Strategy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Marketing Theory

Volume

24

Issue

3

Pagination

525 - 544

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

1470-5931

eissn

1741-301X

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2024-11-20

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor James Fitchett

Deposit date

2024-11-19

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