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| Format: | Recurso digital |
| Langue: | anglais |
| Publié: |
Zenodo
2026
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| Accès en ligne: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18247329 |
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- <p><strong>Abstract</strong></p> <p>This paper develops a Jungian depth-psychological framework for understanding branding as a symbolic and archetypal process, conceptualizing brands as modern mythic narratives through which collective psychological tensions are culturally expressed and negotiated. Through an interpretive analysis of Nike, Apple, and Dove, the paper illustrates how archetypal constellations—the Hero, the Creator, and the Caregiver—structure brand meaning and invite symbolic participation in identity formation.</p> <p>Integrating insights from cultural branding theory and symbolic consumption research, the study reframes consumer engagement as a dialogical process of projection and potential reflection, rather than as a deterministic behavioral outcome. In this sense, the paper analyzes contemporary branding as a psychologically effective form of mediated narrative meaning-making, with implications for media psychology, ethical communication, and reflective media education. Ethical implications are addressed analytically through the Jungian notion of the shadow, highlighting how symbolic power can either intensify unconscious identification or foster reflective awareness.</p> <p>A final neuro-symbolic discussion offers a strictly heuristic analogy between individuation and integrative regulatory processes, explicitly avoiding causal, explanatory, or neuroscientific reduction. The paper concludes by situating branding within the broader process of cultural individuation, arguing that conscious engagement with symbolic tension enables marketing to function not only as a commercial practice but as a medium of meaning.<br><br><strong>Publication status:<br></strong>This is a preprint version of a manuscript accepted for publication in the Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice, Vol. 26(1), 2026.</p> <p><strong>Keywords</strong><br>Jungian psychology; archetypes; branding; consumer identity; symbolic meaning; cultural branding; conscious branding; individuation; consumer culture theory; ethics</p> <p><strong>License</strong><br>This is the author’s original manuscript, made available as an open-access preprint for scholarly discussion.<br>The work is licensed under <strong>Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)</strong>.</p>