World of Wal-Mart

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A01=Christine Labuski
A01=Nick Copeland
american
associates
Author_Christine Labuski
Author_Nick Copeland
business
Category=JB
Category=JHMC
CBA
chain
Contra Dictions
Crystal Bridges Museum
dream
Employee Free Choice Act
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Food Deserts
Good Life
India's Food Crisis
India's Retail Industry
India’s Food Crisis
India’s Retail Industry
Low Price Business Model
marts
model
Occupy Wall Street
Recreational Vehicles
sam
Site Fights
supply
UPC Code
Wal Mart Associates
Wal Mart Cultivated
Wal Mart De Mexico
Wal Mart Distribution Center
Wal Mart Effect
Wal Mart Family
Wal Mart Shoppers
Wal Mart Supercenter
Wal Mart Workers
Wal Mart's Business Model
Wal Mart's Expansion
Wal Mart's Success
Wal Mart’s Business Model
Wal Mart’s Expansion
Wal Mart’s Success
walton

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415894876
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Dec 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book demonstrates the usefulness of anthropological concepts by taking a critical look at Wal-Mart and the American Dream. Rather than singling Wal-Mart out for criticism, the authors treat it as a product of a socio-political order that it also helps to shape. The book attributes Wal-Mart’s success to the failure of American (and global) society to make the Dream available to everyone. It shows how decades of neoliberal economic policies have exposed contradictions at the heart of the Dream, creating an opening for Wal-Mart. The company’s success has generated a host of negative externalities, however, fueling popular ambivalence and organized opposition.

The book also describes the strategies that Wal-Mart uses to maintain legitimacy, fend off unions, enter new markets, and cultivate an aura of benevolence and ordinariness, despite these externalities. It focuses on Wal-Mart’s efforts to forge symbolic and affective inclusion, and their self-promotion as a free market solution to social problems of poverty, inequality, and environmental destruction. Finally, the book contrasts the conceptions of freedom and human rights that underlie Wal-Mart’s business model to the alternative visions of freedom forwarded by their critics.

Nicholas Copeland is a social anthropologist at Virginia Polytechnic University. His research about state power and Maya politics in Guatemala appears in the Journal of Latin American Studies and Development and Change. Nick taught at the University of Arkansas, and has conducted extensive market research inside Wal-Mart.

Christine Labuski is an anthropologist and assistant professor in Women’s and Gender Studies at Virginia Polytechnic University. Her work can be found in Feminist Studies, Archives of Sexual Behavior, and several edited volumes about the gendered body. She has also spent countless hours inside of Wal-Mart stores as a market researcher.

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