Normal view MARC view ISBD view

Market mediations : semiotic investigations on consumers, objects and brands /

By: Heilbrunn, Benoît
Material type: BookPublisher: Hampshire ; New York : New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, c2015.Description: xiii, 250 p. : ill. ; 23 cm.ISBN: 9781137509963Subject(s): Consumption (Economics) -- Social aspects | Marketing -- Social aspects | Brand name products | BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Consumer Behavior | BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Management | BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Marketing / General | BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / International / Marketing | BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Strategic PlanningDDC classification: 658.8
Summary:
"Market Mediations offers a fresh way to look at consumption practices as well as design and branding issues through analysis based on the French and European intellectual tradition. The economy of brands truly came into being in the mid-19th century as a way for manufacturers to transform bulk sales and commodities markets into product markets with high added value. A brand that was already established as a sign of identification and differentiation thus became a driver of social mediation to form a fictional relationship between companies and their end users. Initially, and in the end, the brand served to change the power relationships structuring commodities markets where products were sold in bulk. To account for this vast system of objects and brands, the book draws heavily on the generative trajectory of meaning stemming from the structural semiotics of Greimas obedience; it presupposes that meaning is produced by progressive enrichment from a constitutive core (core values) and gradually rises to the surface to its discursive implementation via objects and figurative elements. "--
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)

"Market Mediations offers a fresh way to look at consumption practices as well as design and branding issues through analysis based on the French and European intellectual tradition. The economy of brands truly came into being in the mid-19th century as a way for manufacturers to transform bulk sales and commodities markets into product markets with high added value. A brand that was already established as a sign of identification and differentiation thus became a driver of social mediation to form a fictional relationship between companies and their end users. Initially, and in the end, the brand served to change the power relationships structuring commodities markets where products were sold in bulk. To account for this vast system of objects and brands, the book draws heavily on the generative trajectory of meaning stemming from the structural semiotics of Greimas obedience; it presupposes that meaning is produced by progressive enrichment from a constitutive core (core values) and gradually rises to the surface to its discursive implementation via objects and figurative elements. "-- Provided by publisher.

Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction: Market Medi(t)ations -- 1. Love And The Market -- 2. Simplexities -- 3. Ethics Despite Amorality -- 4. Narrativites -- 5. I/Materialities -- 6. Embodiments.

Powered by Koha