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Reclaiming the witch: Processes and heroic outcomes of consumer mythopoesis
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Reclaiming the witch: Processes and heroic outcomes of consumer mythopoesis

Maria Carolina Zanette, Diego Rinallo and Laetitia Mimoun
Marketing Theory, Vol.23(1), pp.163-182
01/03/2023

Abstract

Mythopoesis consumer identity marketplace myth witch intersectionality LGBTQIA+ identity politics
Although previous research has investigated consumer mythopoesis (consumers’ identity work using marketplace myths), little is known about its enactment involving ambiguous myths. Here, we investigate the myth of the witch (predominantly depicted by dominant mythmakers as a villain but recently repositioned more positively) and describe how consumers reclaim the empowering and heroic aspects of the ambiguous witch myth. Based on a qualitative study using archival data and in-depth interviews with self-proclaimed witches, we argue that the witch’s ambiguity originates in different mythopoetic cycles. Then, we describe the following processes through which consumers reclaim positive cycles: incarnating the myth, coming out to selected others and practising myth-related craft. Finally, we show that reclaiming results in new forms of heroic agency that amplify the myth’s ambiguity and identity value. Our results reveal that consumers cope with market-wide paradoxical injunctions, stressful situations and marginalisation by transforming these pressures into acts of self-heroism.
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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.3 Management
6.3.65 Consumer Behavior
Web of Science research areas
Business
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