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The Folklorist in the Marketplace
Conversations at the Crossroads of Vernacular Culture and Economics
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Edited by:
and
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2019
About this book
The Folklorist in the Marketplace brings together voices from multiple disciplines to consider how economics shape—and are shaped by—folk groups and academic disciplines. The authors ask how folk and folklorists can productively comment on the economic structures they inhabit.
As trade, technology, and geopolitics have led to a rapid increase in the global spread of cultural products like media, knowledge, objects, and folkways, there has been a concomitant rise in fear and anxiety about globalization’s dark other side—economic nativism, neocolonialism, cultural appropriation, and loss. Culture has become a resource and a currency in the global marketplace. This movement of people and forms necessitates a new textual consideration of how folklore and economics interweave. In The Folklorist in the Marketplace, contributors explore how the marketplace and folklore have always been integrally linked and what that means at this cultural and economic moment.
Covering a variety of topics, from creel boats to the history of a commune that makes hammocks, The Folklorist in the Marketplace goes far beyond the well-trod examinations of material culture to look closely at the historical and contemporary intersections of these two disciplines and to provoke cross-disciplinary conversation and collaboration.
Contributors:
William A. Ashton, Halle M. Butvin, James I. Deutsch, Christofer Johnson, Michael Lange, John Laudun, Julie M-A LeBlanc, Cassie Patterson, Rahima Schwenkbeck, Amy Shuman, Irene Sotiropoulou, Yuanhao Zhao
As trade, technology, and geopolitics have led to a rapid increase in the global spread of cultural products like media, knowledge, objects, and folkways, there has been a concomitant rise in fear and anxiety about globalization’s dark other side—economic nativism, neocolonialism, cultural appropriation, and loss. Culture has become a resource and a currency in the global marketplace. This movement of people and forms necessitates a new textual consideration of how folklore and economics interweave. In The Folklorist in the Marketplace, contributors explore how the marketplace and folklore have always been integrally linked and what that means at this cultural and economic moment.
Covering a variety of topics, from creel boats to the history of a commune that makes hammocks, The Folklorist in the Marketplace goes far beyond the well-trod examinations of material culture to look closely at the historical and contemporary intersections of these two disciplines and to provoke cross-disciplinary conversation and collaboration.
Contributors:
William A. Ashton, Halle M. Butvin, James I. Deutsch, Christofer Johnson, Michael Lange, John Laudun, Julie M-A LeBlanc, Cassie Patterson, Rahima Schwenkbeck, Amy Shuman, Irene Sotiropoulou, Yuanhao Zhao
Author / Editor information
Willow G. Mullins teaches folklore at Washington University in St. Louis and has published on material culture and issues of theory in folklore studies.
Puja Batra-Wells is a scholar of American material cultures and folklore who studies informal economies and modes of cultural display and presentation. She is program manager for the Global Arts + Humanities Discovery Theme at The Ohio State University.
Puja Batra-Wells is a scholar of American material cultures and folklore who studies informal economies and modes of cultural display and presentation. She is program manager for the Global Arts + Humanities Discovery Theme at The Ohio State University.
Reviews
"This timely volume will spark generative conversations in the classroom and the field."
—CHOICE
—CHOICE
"The whole volume—expertly but accessibly written—left me pondering my place, not only as a folklorist in the marketplace, but as the marketplace"
—Folklore
—Folklore
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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Introduction
1 -
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1 Folklore as a Networked Economy: Or, How a Recently-Invented- but- Traditional Artifact Reveals the Way Folkloric Production Has Always Worked
26 -
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2 Branding Unibroue: Selling Québécois Folklore through Beer
47 -
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3 Market Forces and Marketplace Economics at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival
72 -
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4 The Sweet Spot: An Epistemological Approach to the Economics of Sugarmaking in Vermont
92 -
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5 Where the Creel Boats Go: The Politics of Sustainable Fisheries in a Small Orkney Community
109 -
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6 The Economics of Curation and Representation: Dialogues in the Commemorative Landscape of Portsmouth, Ohio
129 -
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7 An Ordered Mess: Folk Narratives and Practices in a Chinese Hui Muslim Market
155 -
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8 Art/Work: Precarious Encounters and Vernacular Economic Remedies
174 -
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9 From Vision to Implementation: Clashing Values of Economic Idealism and Solvency in Twin Oaks Community, 1967–1979
194 -
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10 “Why the Sea Is Salty”: Folktales as Sources of Grassroots Economics
214 -
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11 What Would Hermes Do? A Jungian Perspective on the Trickster and Business Ethics
234 -
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12 Folk Economies and the Artisan Workshop
252 -
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13 Consuming Authenticities: An Economics of Folklorists
271 -
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About the Authors
293 -
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Index
297
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
November 8, 2019
eBook ISBN:
9781607327851
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
312
Other:
21
eBook ISBN:
9781607327851
Audience(s) for this book
Professional and scholarly;