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Commodification is the process of transforming inalienable free or gifted things objects services ideas nature personal

Commodification

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Commodification
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Commodification is the process of transforming inalienable, free, or gifted things (objects, services, ideas, nature, personal information, people or animals) into commodities, or objects for sale. It has a connotation of losing an inherent quality or social relationship when something is integrated by a capitalist marketplace. Concepts that have been argued as being commodified include broad items such as the body, intimacy, public goods, animals and holidays.

History

Terminology

The earliest use of the word "commodification" dates from 1975. Use of the concept of commodification became common with the rise of critical discourse analysis in semiotics. The terms commodification and commoditization are sometimes used synonymously, to describe the process of making commodities out of goods, services, and ideas.

However, other authors distinguish them, with commodification used in social contexts to mean that a non-commercial good has become commercial, typically with connotations of "corrupted by commerce", while commoditization is used in business contexts to mean when the market for an existing product has become a commodity market, where products are interchangeable and there is heavy price competition. In a quip: "Microprocessors are commoditized. Love is commodified."

In Marxist theory

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Karl Marx considered commodity a cell-form of capitalism.

The Marxist understanding of commodity is distinct from its meaning in business. Commodity played a key role throughout Karl Marx's work; he considered it a cell-form of capitalism and a key starting point for an analysis of this politico-economic system. Marx extensively criticized the social impact of commodification under the name commodity fetishism and alienation.

Prior to being turned into a commodity, an object has a "specific individual use value". After becoming a commodity, that same object has a different value: the amount for which it can be exchanged for another commodity. According to Marx, this new value of the commodity is derived from the time taken to produce the good, and other considerations are obsolete, including morality, environmental impact, and aesthetic appeal.

Marx claimed that everything would eventually be commodified: "the things which until then had been communicated, but never exchanged, given, but never sold, acquired, but never bought – virtue, love, conscience – all at last enter into commerce."

Mass communication studies

Media, as a culture industry, is apparent from the rise of mass communications to monetize a populace for profit. Research in critical cultural studies of media effects identify commodification of culture as a recent large contributing force for the disruption of a society by mass media. An example is the display of American culture to the population within its borders and abroad. The commodity being sold is the United States, but mediated to show only the most exciting, dramatic, attention-getting, emotion-rousing aspects. Media corporations are expert at analyzing and selecting appealing elements of the culture, then repackaging and enhancing those elements for a wide audience. The quest for large viewership creates an image that does not show boring, unpleasant, or minority aspects of the United States. The distribution of the alternate form of the culture, for profit, causes misconceptions and stereotyping along with disruption of the original folk culture. Within the United States, the commodification of culture is the mediated view of American society accepted as the culture and even advanced by the culture depicted; the example given is hip-hop and rap music artists stars "selling out". The United States, with media corporations less prone to governmental interference, is successful at spreading American culture worldwide.

Critical cultural research reveal consequences for the lifting of bits of culture, remolding for a mass audience, then selling the alternate view. A few of repercussions of commodification of culture: Only selected, majority cultural practices are shown leaving out other important minority cultures which are overlooked and/or ignored. As in Hollywood movies, only the most exciting, dramatic, emotional aspects are presented while removing unpleasant, controversial or uninteresting aspects. The success of marketing a culture entails distributing as much content as possible to the largest audience, causing disruption of everyday life. Elite media industries are ignorant or deny effects of mass marketing, by avoidance or by explaining that the media has limited effects. There are many types of disruptions, some subtle, many obvious, including propagation of misconceptions, loss of sense of place, a major focus on entertainment, loss of childhood, cultivation, and a disruption of social conventions.

Commodification of life

Animal commodification

The commodification of animals is one of the earliest forms of commodification, which can be traced back to the time when domestication of animals began. It includes the use of animals in all forms,: xvi–xvii  including use of animals for food, medicine, fashion and cosmetics, medical research, labor and transport, entertainment, wildlife trade, companionship, and so forth. Scholars say that the commodification of nonhuman animals in food systems is directly linked to capitalist systems that prioritize "monopolistically inclined financial interests" over the well-being of humans, nonhumans, and the environment. Over 200 billion land and aquatic animals are killed every year to provide humans with animal products for consumption, which many scholars and activists have described as an "animal holocaust".: 29–32, 97  The extensive use of land and other resources for the production of meat instead of grain for human consumption is a leading cause of malnutrition, hunger, and famine around the world.: 204 

Human commodification

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Human flesh at auction by Van Ingen Snyder.

Commodification of humans have been discussed in various context, from slavery to surrogacy. Auctions of cricket players by Indian Premier League, Big Bash League and others is also discussed to be a case of human commodification.Virginity auctions are a further example of self-commodification.Human commodity is a term used in case of human organ trade, paid surrogacy (also known as commodification of the womb)[according to whom?], and human trafficking. According to Gøsta Esping-Andersen, people are commodified or 'turned into objects' when selling their labour on the market to an employer.

Self-commodification

Personal information through social networking services, such as music purchases, how people identify, and user profiles are aggregated and sold to corporations and businesses for microtargeting, advertising and marketing.

Social media influencers are also a recent examples of self-commodification. A travel blogger is an instance of a mediated micro-celebrity, the social-media influencer, targeting a niche audience interested in visiting exotic locales. Social media networks expand the reach of this focused audience to make influencing a profitable profession. They commodify themselves by offering online journals, advice, thoughts, experiences along with photographs and videos, then make money by selling books, self-branding, blog subscriptions, and advertorials. Trust and an increased audience are built by expressing a conversational style, a seemingly real experience by a real person, allowing users connect to the blogger as a friendly voice offering advice on travel choices.

Commodification of culture

Commodification of culture refers to the process by which market forces change the very fabric of cultures. Through consumer capitalism, companies are able to influence things such as style, love and language. Critics argue this creates societal friction and leads to people growing disillusioned with reality. Companies often have opposing interests to the general population and yet still hold so much sway.[citation needed]

Commodification of holidays

Many holidays such as Christmas, Halloween or Valentine's Day have been argued as having become commodified. The commodification of a holiday refers to making celebrations necessarily commercial and based on material goods, like gift giving, elaborate decorations, trick or treating, and card giving. Modern celebrations of many holidays are now more related to the commercial practices and profitable tactics than they are to the holidays' origins. For some holidays, like Halloween, there are arguments that the commodification of the original holiday turned it into the celebrations that people now love. The commodification of other holidays, like Christmas, sparks arguments about undoing the commercialization and getting back to the intended spirit of the holiday.

  • image
    Christmas
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    Valentine's Day
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    Halloween
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    St. Patrick's day
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    Easter
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    New Year's Eve

Commodification of indigenous cultures

image
bell hooks, educator and social critic.

American author and feminist bell hooks described the cultural commodification of race and difference as the dominant culture "eating the other". To hooks, cultural expressions of Otherness, even revolutionary ones, are sold to the dominant culture for their enjoyment, with any messages of social change being marketed not for their messages but used as a mechanism for the dominant ones to acquire a piece of the "primitive". Any interests in past historical culture almost always have a modern twist. According to Mariana Torgovnick:

What is clear now is that the West's fascination with the primitive has to do with its own crises in identity, with its own need to clearly demarcate subject and object even while flirting with other ways of experiencing the universe.

hooks states that marginalized groups are seduced by this concept because of "the promise of recognition and reconciliation".

When the dominant culture demands that the Other be offered as sign that progressive political change is taking place, that the American Dream can indeed be inclusive of difference, it invites a resurgence of essentialist cultural nationalism.

Commodification of indigenous cultures refers to "areas in the life of a community which prior to its penetration by tourism have not been within the domain of economic relations regulated by criteria of market exchange" (Cohen 1988, 372). An example of this type of cultural commodification can be described through viewing the perspective of Hawaiian cultural change since the 1950s. The Hawaiian lūʻau was once a traditional party reserved for community members and local people, but through the rise of tourism, this tradition has lost part of its cultural meaning and is now mostly a "for profit" performance.

Commodification of love

Examples of profiting from love are the myriad The Bachelor television shows, and the increase in luxury hotels catering to singles during Valentine's Day weekends.

Commodification of media, Internet and online communities

Digital commodification occurs when, a business or corporation uses information from an online community without their knowledge, for profit. The commodification of information allows a higher authority to make money rather than a collaborative system of free thoughts. Corporations such as Google, Apple, Facebook, Netflix, and Amazon accelerate and concentrate the commodification of online communities. Digital tracking, like cookies, have further commodified the use of the internet, giving each click, view, or stream monetary value, even if it is an interaction with free content.

Commodification of public goods

Public goods are goods for which users cannot be barred from accessing or using them for failing to pay for them. However, such goods can also be commodified by value addition in the form of products or services or both. Public goods like air and water can be subjected to commodification.

Commodification of subcultures

Various subcultures have been argued to as having become commodified, for example the goth subculture, the biker subculture, the tattoo subculture, the witchcraft subculture, and others.

Commodification of tourism

Tourism has been analyzed in the context of commodification as a process of transforming local cultures and heritage into marketable goods. The commodification of tourism removes local culture from the foreground, replacing it with profitability from non-residents. This may be in the form of entertainment, souvenirs, food markets, or others. Tourism leads, in part, to the commodification of indigenous cultures as people return from visits with partial ideas and representations of the culture.

See also

  • Big data
  • Commercialization
  • Commercialization of love
  • Commodification of animals
  • Commodification of nature
  • Decommodification
  • Deregulation
  • Exchange value
  • Human commodity auctions
  • Privatization
  • Value-form
  • Globalization

References

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Bibliography

  • Farah, Paolo Davide, Tremolada Riccardo, Desirability of Commodification of Intangible Cultural Heritage: The Unsatisfying Role of IPRs, in TRANSNATIONAL DISPUTE MANAGEMENT, Special Issues "The New Frontiers of Cultural Law: Intangible Heritage Disputes", Volume 11, Issue 2, March 2014, ISSN 1875-4120 Available at SSRN.com
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Further reading

Polanyi, Karl. "The Self-Regulating Market," Economics as a Social Science, 2nd edn, 2004.

Author: www.NiNa.Az

Publication date: May 25, 2025 / 08:36

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Commodification is the process of transforming inalienable free or gifted things objects services ideas nature personal information people or animals into commodities or objects for sale It has a connotation of losing an inherent quality or social relationship when something is integrated by a capitalist marketplace Concepts that have been argued as being commodified include broad items such as the body intimacy public goods animals and holidays HistoryTerminology The earliest use of the word commodification dates from 1975 Use of the concept of commodification became common with the rise of critical discourse analysis in semiotics The terms commodification and commoditization are sometimes used synonymously to describe the process of making commodities out of goods services and ideas However other authors distinguish them with commodification used in social contexts to mean that a non commercial good has become commercial typically with connotations of corrupted by commerce while commoditization is used in business contexts to mean when the market for an existing product has become a commodity market where products are interchangeable and there is heavy price competition In a quip Microprocessors are commoditized Love is commodified In Marxist theory Karl Marx considered commodity a cell form of capitalism The Marxist understanding of commodity is distinct from its meaning in business Commodity played a key role throughout Karl Marx s work he considered it a cell form of capitalism and a key starting point for an analysis of this politico economic system Marx extensively criticized the social impact of commodification under the name commodity fetishism and alienation Prior to being turned into a commodity an object has a specific individual use value After becoming a commodity that same object has a different value the amount for which it can be exchanged for another commodity According to Marx this new value of the commodity is derived from the time taken to produce the good and other considerations are obsolete including morality environmental impact and aesthetic appeal Marx claimed that everything would eventually be commodified the things which until then had been communicated but never exchanged given but never sold acquired but never bought virtue love conscience all at last enter into commerce Mass communication studies Media as a culture industry is apparent from the rise of mass communications to monetize a populace for profit Research in critical cultural studies of media effects identify commodification of culture as a recent large contributing force for the disruption of a society by mass media An example is the display of American culture to the population within its borders and abroad The commodity being sold is the United States but mediated to show only the most exciting dramatic attention getting emotion rousing aspects Media corporations are expert at analyzing and selecting appealing elements of the culture then repackaging and enhancing those elements for a wide audience The quest for large viewership creates an image that does not show boring unpleasant or minority aspects of the United States The distribution of the alternate form of the culture for profit causes misconceptions and stereotyping along with disruption of the original folk culture Within the United States the commodification of culture is the mediated view of American society accepted as the culture and even advanced by the culture depicted the example given is hip hop and rap music artists stars selling out The United States with media corporations less prone to governmental interference is successful at spreading American culture worldwide Critical cultural research reveal consequences for the lifting of bits of culture remolding for a mass audience then selling the alternate view A few of repercussions of commodification of culture Only selected majority cultural practices are shown leaving out other important minority cultures which are overlooked and or ignored As in Hollywood movies only the most exciting dramatic emotional aspects are presented while removing unpleasant controversial or uninteresting aspects The success of marketing a culture entails distributing as much content as possible to the largest audience causing disruption of everyday life Elite media industries are ignorant or deny effects of mass marketing by avoidance or by explaining that the media has limited effects There are many types of disruptions some subtle many obvious including propagation of misconceptions loss of sense of place a major focus on entertainment loss of childhood cultivation and a disruption of social conventions Commodification of lifeAnimal commodification The commodification of animals is one of the earliest forms of commodification which can be traced back to the time when domestication of animals began It includes the use of animals in all forms xvi xvii including use of animals for food medicine fashion and cosmetics medical research labor and transport entertainment wildlife trade companionship and so forth Scholars say that the commodification of nonhuman animals in food systems is directly linked to capitalist systems that prioritize monopolistically inclined financial interests over the well being of humans nonhumans and the environment Over 200 billion land and aquatic animals are killed every year to provide humans with animal products for consumption which many scholars and activists have described as an animal holocaust 29 32 97 The extensive use of land and other resources for the production of meat instead of grain for human consumption is a leading cause of malnutrition hunger and famine around the world 204 Human commodification Human flesh at auction by Van Ingen Snyder Commodification of humans have been discussed in various context from slavery to surrogacy Auctions of cricket players by Indian Premier League Big Bash League and others is also discussed to be a case of human commodification Virginity auctions are a further example of self commodification Human commodity is a term used in case of human organ trade paid surrogacy also known as commodification of the womb according to whom and human trafficking According to Gosta Esping Andersen people are commodified or turned into objects when selling their labour on the market to an employer Self commodification Personal information through social networking services such as music purchases how people identify and user profiles are aggregated and sold to corporations and businesses for microtargeting advertising and marketing Social media influencers are also a recent examples of self commodification A travel blogger is an instance of a mediated micro celebrity the social media influencer targeting a niche audience interested in visiting exotic locales Social media networks expand the reach of this focused audience to make influencing a profitable profession They commodify themselves by offering online journals advice thoughts experiences along with photographs and videos then make money by selling books self branding blog subscriptions and advertorials Trust and an increased audience are built by expressing a conversational style a seemingly real experience by a real person allowing users connect to the blogger as a friendly voice offering advice on travel choices Commodification of cultureCommodification of culture refers to the process by which market forces change the very fabric of cultures Through consumer capitalism companies are able to influence things such as style love and language Critics argue this creates societal friction and leads to people growing disillusioned with reality Companies often have opposing interests to the general population and yet still hold so much sway citation needed Commodification of holidays Many holidays such as Christmas Halloween or Valentine s Day have been argued as having become commodified The commodification of a holiday refers to making celebrations necessarily commercial and based on material goods like gift giving elaborate decorations trick or treating and card giving Modern celebrations of many holidays are now more related to the commercial practices and profitable tactics than they are to the holidays origins For some holidays like Halloween there are arguments that the commodification of the original holiday turned it into the celebrations that people now love The commodification of other holidays like Christmas sparks arguments about undoing the commercialization and getting back to the intended spirit of the holiday Christmas Valentine s Day Halloween St Patrick s day Easter New Year s EveCommodification of indigenous cultures bell hooks educator and social critic American author and feminist bell hooks described the cultural commodification of race and difference as the dominant culture eating the other To hooks cultural expressions of Otherness even revolutionary ones are sold to the dominant culture for their enjoyment with any messages of social change being marketed not for their messages but used as a mechanism for the dominant ones to acquire a piece of the primitive Any interests in past historical culture almost always have a modern twist According to Mariana Torgovnick What is clear now is that the West s fascination with the primitive has to do with its own crises in identity with its own need to clearly demarcate subject and object even while flirting with other ways of experiencing the universe hooks states that marginalized groups are seduced by this concept because of the promise of recognition and reconciliation When the dominant culture demands that the Other be offered as sign that progressive political change is taking place that the American Dream can indeed be inclusive of difference it invites a resurgence of essentialist cultural nationalism Commodification of indigenous cultures refers to areas in the life of a community which prior to its penetration by tourism have not been within the domain of economic relations regulated by criteria of market exchange Cohen 1988 372 An example of this type of cultural commodification can be described through viewing the perspective of Hawaiian cultural change since the 1950s The Hawaiian luʻau was once a traditional party reserved for community members and local people but through the rise of tourism this tradition has lost part of its cultural meaning and is now mostly a for profit performance Commodification of love Examples of profiting from love are the myriad The Bachelor television shows and the increase in luxury hotels catering to singles during Valentine s Day weekends Commodification of media Internet and online communities Digital commodification occurs when a business or corporation uses information from an online community without their knowledge for profit The commodification of information allows a higher authority to make money rather than a collaborative system of free thoughts Corporations such as Google Apple Facebook Netflix and Amazon accelerate and concentrate the commodification of online communities Digital tracking like cookies have further commodified the use of the internet giving each click view or stream monetary value even if it is an interaction with free content Commodification of public goods Public goods are goods for which users cannot be barred from accessing or using them for failing to pay for them However such goods can also be commodified by value addition in the form of products or services or both Public goods like air and water can be subjected to commodification Commodification of subcultures Various subcultures have been argued to as having become commodified for example the goth subculture the biker subculture the tattoo subculture the witchcraft subculture and others Commodification of tourism Tourism has been analyzed in the context of commodification as a process of transforming local cultures and heritage into marketable goods The commodification of tourism removes local culture from the foreground replacing it with profitability from non residents This may be in the form of entertainment souvenirs food markets or others Tourism leads in part to the commodification of indigenous cultures as people return from visits with partial ideas and representations of the culture See alsoBig data Commercialization Commercialization of love Commodification of animals Commodification of nature Decommodification Deregulation Exchange value Human commodity auctions Privatization Value form GlobalizationReferencesMaloney Lauren 19 November 2015 The Commodification of Human Beings nulawreview org Retrieved 26 February 2020 Wilsterman James M 2008 The Human Commodity thecrimson thecrimson com Retrieved 26 February 2020 For animals United Nations Commodity Trade Statistics Database UN ComTrade Josephine Donovan Aestheticizing Animal Cruelty College Literature 38 4 Fall 2011 pp 202 217 p 203 JSTOR 41302895For slaves as commodities Appadurai 1986 pp 84 85 David Hawkes Shakespeare and Economic Theory Bloomsbury Publishing 2015 p 130 For body commodification Lesley A Sharp The Commodification of the Body and Its Parts Annual Review of Anthropology 29 2000 pp 287 328 p 295ff JSTOR 223423 commodification n Second edition 1989 online version November 2010 lt http www oed com view Entry 37198 gt accessed 6 January 2011 Hearn Alison 14 March 2017 13 Commodification Keywords for Media Studies New York University Press pp 43 46 doi 10 18574 nyu 9781479817474 003 0016 ISBN 978 1 4798 1747 4 retrieved 29 January 2024 Sharp Lesley A 21 October 2000 The Commodification of the Body and its Parts Annual Review of Anthropology 29 1 287 328 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 29 1 287 ISSN 0084 6570 PMID 15977341 Constable Nicole October 2009 The Commodification of Intimacy Marriage Sex and Reproductive Labor Annual Review of Anthropology 38 1 49 64 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 37 081407 085133 ISSN 0084 6570 Commodification Neoliberalism neolib uga edu Retrieved 11 June 2023 Nibert David 2011 Origins and Consequences of the Animal Industrial Complex In Steven Best Richard Kahn Anthony J Nocella II Peter McLaren eds The Global Industrial Complex Systems of Domination Rowman amp Littlefield pp 197 209 ISBN 978 0 7391 3698 0 We Can Reclaim Christmas from Capitalism In These Times 20 December 2018 Retrieved 16 November 2021 Critical Discourse Analysis and Stylistics PDF Retrieved 22 September 2011 Robert Hartwell Fiske s Dictionary of Unendurable English A Compendium of Mistakes in Grammar Usage and Spelling with commentary on lexicographers and linguists Robert Hartwell Fiske p 99 Appadurai 1986 also cited in Martha M Ertman Joan C Williams Rethinking commodification 2005 in Afterword by Carol Rose pp 402 403 This cites various uses of commodification to mean become a commodity market and considers the use of commodification Peggy Radin 1987 and commoditization Appadurai 1986 as equivalent Greenwood D J 1977 V L Smith ed Culture by the Pound An Anthropological Perspective on Tourism as Cultural Commoditization Hosts and Guests Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press pp 129 139 Surowiecki James 30 January 1998 The Commoditization Conundrum Slate Retrieved 16 August 2015 What corporations fear is the phenomenon now known rather inelegantly as commoditization What the term means is simply the conversion of the market for a given product into a commodity market which is characterized by declining prices and profit margins increasing competition and lowered barriers to entry Commoditization is therefore different from commodification the word cultural critics use to decry the corruption of higher goods by commercial values Microprocessors are commoditized Love is commodified Prodnik Jernej 2012 A Note on the Ongoing Processes of Commodification From the Audience Commodity to the Social Factory pp 274 301 Retrieved 30 March 2013 via Scribd Marx Karl 1867 Chapter 1 Section 3 The Form of Value or Exchange Value Part 4 The Fetishism of Commodities and the Secret thereof Capital A Critique of Political Economy Vol 1 Progress Press Moscow via Marxists Internet Archive Hearn A 2017 Commodification In L Ouellette amp J Gray Eds Keywords for media studies New York University Press Credo Reference https uri idm oclc org login url https search credoreference com content entry nyupresskms commodification 0 institutionId 4949 Leopold David 29 April 2015 Karl Marx In Duncan Pritchard ed Karl Marx Philosophy Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 obo 9780195396577 0265 ISBN 978 0 19 539657 7 Baran S J Davis D K 2015 Mass Communication Theory Foundations Ferment and Future Seventh edition Cengage Learning pp 328 331 ISBN 978 81 315 2912 6 Best Steven 2011 Introduction Pathologies of Power and the Rise of the Global Industrial Complex In Steven Best Richard Kahn Anthony J Nocella II Peter McLaren eds The Global Industrial Complex Systems of Domination Rowman amp Littlefield pp ix xxv ISBN 978 0 7391 3698 0 Beirne Piers May 2021 Wildlife Trade and COVID 19 Towards a Criminology of Anthropogenic Pathogen Spillover The British Journal of Criminology 61 3 Oxford University Press 607 626 doi 10 1093 bjc azaa084 ISSN 1464 3529 PMC 7953978 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Arcari Paula May 2020 Disconnection amp Demonisation COVID 19 Shows Why We Need to Stop Commodifying All Animals Social Sciences amp Humanities Open doi 10 2139 ssrn 3599772 S2CID 225822910 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Repka Meneka 2019 Nocella Ii Anthony J Drew Carolyn George Amber E Ketenci Sinem Lupinacci John Purdy Ian Leeson Schatz Joe eds Education for Total Liberation Critical Animal Pedagogy and Teaching Against Speciesism Radical Animal Studies and Total Liberation 1 ed New York Peter Lang doi 10 3726 b14204 ISBN 978 1 4331 5789 9 S2CID 240272942 Benatar David 2015 The Misanthropic Argument for Anti natalism In S Hannan S Brennan R Vernon eds Permissible Progeny The Morality of 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Media and Sport The Cultural Dynamics of Global Games Sociology Compass 3 4 543 558 doi 10 1111 j 1751 9020 2009 00225 x Watson Cate December 2011 Test Match Special Twenty20 and the future of cricket Sport in Society 14 10 1383 1394 doi 10 1080 17430437 2011 620379 S2CID 145758426 Dunn Jennifer C Vik Tennley A 1 September 2014 Virginity for Sale A Foucauldian Moment in the History of Sexuality Sexuality amp Culture 18 3 487 504 doi 10 1007 s12119 013 9207 0 ISSN 1936 4822 S2CID 143947497 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Capron Alexander M 2017 Human Commodification Professions Governments and the Need for Further Exploration New Cannibal Markets Globalization and Commodification of the Human Body Editions de la Maison des sciences de l homme pp 397 416 ISBN 978 2 7351 2285 1 Esping Andersen Gosta 1990 The Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism PDF Oxford University Press ISBN 0 691 09457 8 Ess Charles 2020 Digital media ethics Third ed Cambridge Medford MA Polity ISBN 978 1 5095 3342 8 Duffy Andrew Kang Hillary Yu Ping 31 July 2019 Follow me I m famous travel bloggers self mediated performances of everyday exoticism Media Culture amp Society 42 2 172 190 doi 10 1177 0163443719853503 ISSN 0163 4437 S2CID 201407654 Groom Nick 2 October 2018 Hallowe en and Valentine The Culture of Saints Days in the English Speaking World Folklore 129 4 331 352 doi 10 1080 0015587X 2018 1510651 ISSN 0015 587X S2CID 165870855 Valentine s Day and the Commodification of Love or the Economic Impacts of Courtship City REDI Blog blog bham ac uk Retrieved 18 March 2021 Cox Patrick 2015 Christmas The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Consumption and Consumer Studies American Cancer Society pp 1 2 doi 10 1002 9781118989463 wbeccs260 ISBN 978 1 118 98946 3 retrieved 18 March 2021 Morton Lisa 30 October 2015 All hail the commodification of Halloween Over the years companies profiting off the holiday are what have made it an American favorite nydailynews com Retrieved 16 November 2021 hooks bell 1992 Black Looks Race and Representation South End Press Torgovnick Marianna 1991 Gone Primitive Savage Intellects Modern Lives Chicago Cohen Erik 1988 Authenticity and commodification in tourism Annals of Tourism Research 15 3 371 386 doi 10 1016 0160 7383 88 90028 X Lipton L 2003 In Selling Valentine s Day U S Marketers Decide To Broaden Love Concept Hotels Look Beyond Couples to Woo Singles Pet Set You Me and Fido The Wall Street Journal Niemeyer Katharina Keightley Emily 1 September 2020 The commodification of time and memory Online communities and the dynamics of commercially produced nostalgia New Media amp Society 22 9 1639 1662 doi 10 1177 1461444820914869 ISSN 1461 4448 S2CID 214293153 Lupton Deborah 2014 The commodification of patient opinion the digital patient experience economy in the age of big data Sociology of Health amp Illness 36 6 856 869 doi 10 1111 1467 9566 12109 hdl 2123 9063 ISSN 1467 9566 PMID 24443847 Currah Andrew 1 August 2007 Managing creativity the tensions between commodities and gifts in a digital networked environment Economy and Society 36 3 467 494 doi 10 1080 03085140701428415 ISSN 0308 5147 S2CID 145631922 Jose George 3 September 2017 Hawa khaana in Vasai Virar City 21 5 632 640 Bibcode 2017City 21 632J doi 10 1080 13604813 2017 1374779 ISSN 1360 4813 S2CID 149420789 Burawoy Michael 31 May 2010 From Polanyi to Pollyanna The False Optimism of Global Labor Studies Global Labour Journal 1 2 doi 10 15173 glj v1i2 1079 ISSN 1918 6711 Barlow Maude 1 February 2001 Commodification of water the wrong prescription Water Science and Technology 43 4 79 84 Bibcode 2001WSTec 43 79B doi 10 2166 wst 2001 0183 ISSN 0273 1223 PMID 11379230 Public Reason The Commodification of the Public Service of Water A Normative Perspective publicreason ro Retrieved 15 June 2021 Spracklen Karl Spracklen Beverley 1 April 2014 The strange and spooky battle over bats and black dresses The commodification of Whitby Goth Weekend and the loss of a subculture PDF Tourist Studies 14 1 86 102 doi 10 1177 1468797613511688 ISSN 1468 7976 S2CID 145623916 Cova Bernard Kozinets Robert Shankar Avi 25 June 2012 Consumer Tribes Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 41467 1 Krier Daniel Swart William J 1 January 2016 The Commodification of Spectacle Spectators Sponsors and the Outlaw Biker Diegesis at Sturgis Critical Sociology 42 1 11 32 doi 10 1177 0896920514524605 ISSN 0896 9205 S2CID 145097590 Austin D Mark Gagne Patricia Orend Angela 2010 Commodification and Popular Imagery of the Biker in American Culture The Journal of Popular Culture 43 5 942 963 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5931 2010 00781 x ISSN 1540 5931 Kosut Mary 2006 An Ironic Fad The Commodification and Consumption of Tattoos The Journal of Popular Culture 39 6 1035 1048 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5931 2006 00333 x ISSN 1540 5931 Berger Helen A 25 September 2006 Witchcraft and Magic Contemporary North America University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 1971 5 Schiele Kristen Venkatesh Alladi 2 September 2016 Regaining control through reclamation how consumption subcultures preserve meaning and group identity after commodification Consumption Markets amp Culture 19 5 427 450 doi 10 1080 10253866 2015 1135797 ISSN 1025 3866 S2CID 146815933 Russell Constance L Ankenman M J 1 January 1996 Orangutans as Photographic Collectibles Ecotourism and The Commodification of Nature Tourism Recreation Research 21 1 71 78 doi 10 1080 02508281 1996 11014765 ISSN 0250 8281 Shepherd Robert 1 August 2002 Commodification culture and tourism Tourist Studies 2 2 183 201 doi 10 1177 146879702761936653 ISSN 1468 7976 S2CID 55744323 Kirtsoglou Elisabeth Theodossopoulos Dimitrios 1 June 2004 They are Taking Our Culture Away Tourism and Culture Commodification in the Garifuna Community of Roatan Critique of Anthropology 24 2 135 157 doi 10 1177 0308275X04042650 ISSN 0308 275X S2CID 144331095 Cousins Jenny A Evans James Sadler Jon 2009 Selling Conservation Scientific Legitimacy and the Commodification of Conservation Tourism Ecology and Society 14 1 doi 10 5751 ES 02804 140132 hdl 10535 3507 ISSN 1708 3087 JSTOR 26268031 BibliographyFarah Paolo Davide Tremolada Riccardo Desirability of Commodification of Intangible Cultural Heritage The Unsatisfying Role of IPRs in TRANSNATIONAL DISPUTE MANAGEMENT Special Issues The New Frontiers of Cultural Law Intangible Heritage Disputes Volume 11 Issue 2 March 2014 ISSN 1875 4120 Available at SSRN com Farah Paolo Davide Tremolada Riccardo Intellectual Property Rights Human Rights and Intangible Cultural Heritage Journal of Intellectual Property Law Issue 2 Part I June 2014 ISSN 0035 614X Giuffre pp 21 47 Available at SSRN com Schimank Uwe and Volkmann Ute ed The Marketization of Society Economizing the Non Economic Bremen Research Cluster Welfare Societies 2012 Further readingPolanyi Karl The Self Regulating Market Economics as a Social Science 2nd edn 2004

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