MN5554 Marketing and Society
Academic year
2024 to 2025 Semester 2
Curricular information may be subject to change
Further information on which modules are specific to your programme.
Key module information
SCOTCAT credits
20
SCQF level
SCQF level 11
Availability restrictions
Not available to the Banking and Finance Postgraduate Programme
Planned timetable
To be arranged.
Module coordinator
Ms J F Brooks
Module Staff
Julie Brooks
Module description
This module examines the effects of marketing on societies. The powerful social and cultural influence of marketing has been widely recognised. Through branding and communication marketing shapes consumption, identity and relationships. Our appearance, ideas and behaviour are influenced by marketing in ways more subtle and pervasive than we might think. What we eat, drink and wear; where we live and how we travel; our work and leisure; even the most intimate details of our lives respond to the powers of marketing. The future of marketing is challenged by the negative connotations of globalisation. Actions by certain firms have caused strong reactions to negative effects on workers, consumers and environments, such that a plethora of anti-corporate protest movements has been mobilised in recent decades.
Assessment pattern
100% coursework
Re-assessment
100% coursework
Learning and teaching methods and delivery
Weekly contact
Lectures and seminars (3hrs x 11 weeks).
Scheduled learning hours
33
Guided independent study hours
167
Intended learning outcomes
- By the end of the module students will understand the conceptual frameworks informing analyses of marketing’s impact on consumers, workers, societies and the environment and apply them to diagnose critical issues;
- On completion of this module students will be able to analyse the complex and dynamic influences that marketing has on cultures and societies;
- On completion of this module students will be able to apply a knowledge of terminology, trends, methodology, principles, theories and structures in relation to marketing, consumerism, materialism, globalisation and resistance.
- By the end of this module students will have attained facilitation skills, including: the ability to lead a discussion while ensuring wide participation from all individuals and to summarise key issues arising from a broad topic, presenting them succinctly verbally, as well as in writing and or visually.
- By the end of this module students will have the ability to collect, interpret and synthesise a range of perspectives on complex topics; communicate ideas and information in a captivating and engaging way through written, verbal and visual presentation and reflect on performance, considering the differences between expectations and reality