Bargaining with God: Religion, Advertising and Commercial Success in Kenya

This paper seeks to understand how small-scale entrepreneurs in Nairobi, Kenya understand the relationship between religion and commerce through an analysis of shop advertising signs. While the sacred and profane are often theorized as mutually exclusive categories, the paper describes how these sph...

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Main Authors: Dolan, C, Johnstone, M
Format: Journal article
Published: 2009
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author Dolan, C
Johnstone, M
author_facet Dolan, C
Johnstone, M
author_sort Dolan, C
collection OXFORD
description This paper seeks to understand how small-scale entrepreneurs in Nairobi, Kenya understand the relationship between religion and commerce through an analysis of shop advertising signs. While the sacred and profane are often theorized as mutually exclusive categories, the paper describes how these spheres are fused through the use religion-referencing signs among small businesses. In contrast to the conventional purpose of business signs, shop owners did not use signs to advertise the nature of their business and/or its products to potential customers. Rather the primary motive in selecting a religious name was to communicate with God in order to manage economic uncertainties and achieve material blessings. The paper highlights three factors that influence the religious orientation of business signs: i) the concept of financial blessing embraced in the materialist ethos of the "Prosperity Gospel"; ii) a belief in the ubiquitous presence of good and evil forces, and the need to mediate these forces in the economic sphere; and iii) the importance of moral conduct in the pursuit of financial gain. The paper argues that these factors render shop signs less a form of advertising per se than a bargain with God.
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spelling oxford-uuid:e8704140-ca4a-49b0-b276-db9f253122d32022-03-27T10:46:41ZBargaining with God: Religion, Advertising and Commercial Success in KenyaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e8704140-ca4a-49b0-b276-db9f253122d3Saïd Business School - Eureka2009Dolan, CJohnstone, MThis paper seeks to understand how small-scale entrepreneurs in Nairobi, Kenya understand the relationship between religion and commerce through an analysis of shop advertising signs. While the sacred and profane are often theorized as mutually exclusive categories, the paper describes how these spheres are fused through the use religion-referencing signs among small businesses. In contrast to the conventional purpose of business signs, shop owners did not use signs to advertise the nature of their business and/or its products to potential customers. Rather the primary motive in selecting a religious name was to communicate with God in order to manage economic uncertainties and achieve material blessings. The paper highlights three factors that influence the religious orientation of business signs: i) the concept of financial blessing embraced in the materialist ethos of the "Prosperity Gospel"; ii) a belief in the ubiquitous presence of good and evil forces, and the need to mediate these forces in the economic sphere; and iii) the importance of moral conduct in the pursuit of financial gain. The paper argues that these factors render shop signs less a form of advertising per se than a bargain with God.
spellingShingle Dolan, C
Johnstone, M
Bargaining with God: Religion, Advertising and Commercial Success in Kenya
title Bargaining with God: Religion, Advertising and Commercial Success in Kenya
title_full Bargaining with God: Religion, Advertising and Commercial Success in Kenya
title_fullStr Bargaining with God: Religion, Advertising and Commercial Success in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Bargaining with God: Religion, Advertising and Commercial Success in Kenya
title_short Bargaining with God: Religion, Advertising and Commercial Success in Kenya
title_sort bargaining with god religion advertising and commercial success in kenya
work_keys_str_mv AT dolanc bargainingwithgodreligionadvertisingandcommercialsuccessinkenya
AT johnstonem bargainingwithgodreligionadvertisingandcommercialsuccessinkenya