1st Edition

Foundations of Marketing Thought The Influence of the German Historical School

By D.G. Brian Jones, Mark Tadajewski Copyright 2018
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    The study and teaching of marketing as a university subject is generally understood to have originated in America during the early 20th century emerging as an applied branch of economics. This book tells a different story describing the influence of the German Historical School on institutional economists and economic historians who pioneered the study of marketing in America and Britain during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.



    Drawing from archival materials at the University of Wisconsin, Harvard Business School, and the University of Birmingham, this book documents the early intellectual genealogy of marketing science and traces the ideas that early American and British economists borrowed from German scholars to study and teach marketing. Early marketing scholars both in America and Britain openly credited the German School, and its ideology based on social welfare and distributive justice was a strong motivation for many institutional economists who studied marketing in America, predating the modern macro-marketing school by many decades.



    Challenging many traditional beliefs, this book provides an authoritative new narrative of the origins of marketing thought. It will be of great interest to educators, scholars and advanced students with an interest in marketing theory and history, and in the history of economic thought.

    Table of Contents



    List of Figures and Tables





    Preface



    Acknowledgements



    Chapter One: Introduction



    Historical Research in Marketing



    Collegiate Education for Business – and Marketing



    The Emerging Marketing Discipline



    Origins in Economic Thought



    Method and Overview



    Conclusion





    Chapter Two: The German Historical School of Economics



    Introduction



    The Migration of American Students to Germany



    Science in the Service of Industry



    The German Historical School of Economics



    The Older School



    The Younger School



    Influence of the German Historical School of Economics



    Conclusion





    Chapter Three: Foundations of Marketing Thought at the University of Wisconsin



    Introduction



    The Conditions of Possibility for Richard T. Ely at Wisconsin



    Ely Arrives at Wisconsin



    Back to Classical Economics and Beyond



    Ely’s Trial: Economic Heresy



    Wisconsin Students of the German Historical School



    Edward David Jones



    Henry Charles Taylor



    Economics and Commerce at Wisconsin



    Conclusion





    Chapter Four: Foundations of Marketing Thought at the University of Illinois



    Introduction



    Simon Litman and the Foundations of Marketing Thought



    University of California (1902 – 1908)



    University of Illinois (1908 – 1948)



    Conclusion



    Appendix 4.1 Outline of "Mechanism & Technique of Commerce"





    Chapter Five: Foundations of Marketing Thought at the University of Birmingham, UK



    Introduction



    William James Ashley (1860 – 1927)



    Business Education in Britain



    Ashley – Economic Historian and Business Educator



    Moving to Birmingham



    Business Economics and Marketing



    Teaching Commercial Policy (Marketing):



    "Business Poli

    Biography

    D.G. Brian Jones is the founding Editor of the Journal of Historical Research in Marketing and co-editor of the Routledge Studies in the History of Marketing. His research focuses on the history of marketing thought and has been published widely.





    Mark Tadajewski is the Editor of the Journal of Marketing Management, an Associate Editor of the Journal of Historical Research in Marketing, the co-editor of the Routledge Studies in Critical Marketing and the Routledge Studies in the History of Marketing series.

    The Foundations of Marketing Thought: The Influence of the German Historical School provides a fitting prequel and welcome addition to Bartels’ renowned History of Marketing Thought. Foundations significantly extends Bartels’ intellectual genesis of marketing in the academy to the teachers who influenced the earliest pioneers of marketing thought in the United States as well as the United Kingdom. The authors also offer extensive new details into the lives and careers of the marketing pioneers themselves. The book delivers a superbly illuminating origin story of academic marketing. As such, this work belongs on every marketing historian’s bookshelf.

    Erik Shaw, Professor of Marketing, College of Business, Florida Atlantic University, USA.

    Which intellectual traditions influenced significantly the approaches of the founders of the marketing discipline in the early 1900s? In Foundations of Marketing Thought, D. G. Brian Jones and Mark Tadajewski present detailed, well-sourced, and careful arguments that show that the German Historical School was much more influential than has hitherto been documented, or even acknowledged. No serious student of marketing’s intellectual history can—or should—ignore Foundations’ arguments.

    Shelby D. Hunt, The Jerry S. Rawls and P.W. Horn Professor of Marketing, Rawls College of Business Administration, Texas Tech University, USA.

    This path breaking monograph will almost certainly have a revolutionary impact on our understanding of the early history of marketing thought. Drawing upon their painstaking archival research, Tadajewski and Jones reveal areas where Bartels, previously the unquestioned authority in this area, was incomplete in his coverage and, as regards the importance of the German Historical School, just plain wrong. The myriad of linkages that existed between that School of Thought and American