Semiotics of pride and profit: interrogating commodification in indigenous handicraft production

This study investigates the shifting terrain of pride, profit and power relations in minority language communities under contemporary globalisation. While “pride” associates linguistic-cultural heritage with identity and preservation, “profit” views these as sources of economic gain. In contemporary...

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Published in:Social Semiotics
Main Author: Dlaske, Kati
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Routledge 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201410293123
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author Dlaske, Kati
author_facet Dlaske, Kati
author_sort Dlaske, Kati
collection JYX - Jyväskylä University Digital Archive
container_issue 5
container_start_page 582
container_title Social Semiotics
container_volume 24
description This study investigates the shifting terrain of pride, profit and power relations in minority language communities under contemporary globalisation. While “pride” associates linguistic-cultural heritage with identity and preservation, “profit” views these as sources of economic gain. In contemporary late capitalism, “pride” seems to be increasingly giving way to “profit”. Arguing that this transformation needs to be interrogated in terms of complexity and that a detailed, multilayered semiotic analysis can open a privileged window for such an inquiry, this study combines critical multimodal discourse analysis and an ethnographic approach to analyse processes of semiotic commodification in handicraft production in the indigenous minority language community of the Sámi in northern Lapland. The investigation focuses on the activities of an innovative Sámi artist and entrepreneur, and within these a range of paper notebooks, which are, although designed by the Sámi artist and sold in her handicraft shop in Lapland, produced by women living at the border of Thailand and Laos. The investigation illuminates two critical shifts: how the move towards profit can open up space to contest the ownership of pride within an ethnic community. Second, how this move makes way for new, globalised modes of production of ‘indigenous handicrafts’ and creates global vectors of power, engaged in both empowerment and exploitation, in the production of both pride and profit. The study thereby contributes to the understanding of the increasingly complex power relations and the ambivalence and multiple effects of practices constituting the apparent shift from “pride” to “profit”. peerReviewed
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
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op_rights © Taylor & Francis. This is a final draft version of an article whose final and definitive form has been published at 10.1080/10350330.2014.943459 by Taylor & Francis.
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spelling ftjyvaeskylaenun:oai:jyx.jyu.fi:123456789/44562 2025-04-13T14:26:34+00:00 Semiotics of pride and profit: interrogating commodification in indigenous handicraft production Dlaske, Kati 2014 582-598 application/pdf http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201410293123 eng eng Routledge Social Semiotics 1035-0330 5 24 10.1080/10350330.2014.943459 © Taylor & Francis. This is a final draft version of an article whose final and definitive form has been published at 10.1080/10350330.2014.943459 by Taylor & Francis. openAccess kielivähemmistöt commodification late capitalism multimodal discourse analysis Soveltava kielitiede Applied Linguistics kaupallistuminen etnografia diskurssianalyysi käsityöt kielelliset vähemmistöt research article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2df8fbb1 acceptedVersion article A1 2014 ftjyvaeskylaenun 2025-03-20T05:54:17Z This study investigates the shifting terrain of pride, profit and power relations in minority language communities under contemporary globalisation. While “pride” associates linguistic-cultural heritage with identity and preservation, “profit” views these as sources of economic gain. In contemporary late capitalism, “pride” seems to be increasingly giving way to “profit”. Arguing that this transformation needs to be interrogated in terms of complexity and that a detailed, multilayered semiotic analysis can open a privileged window for such an inquiry, this study combines critical multimodal discourse analysis and an ethnographic approach to analyse processes of semiotic commodification in handicraft production in the indigenous minority language community of the Sámi in northern Lapland. The investigation focuses on the activities of an innovative Sámi artist and entrepreneur, and within these a range of paper notebooks, which are, although designed by the Sámi artist and sold in her handicraft shop in Lapland, produced by women living at the border of Thailand and Laos. The investigation illuminates two critical shifts: how the move towards profit can open up space to contest the ownership of pride within an ethnic community. Second, how this move makes way for new, globalised modes of production of ‘indigenous handicrafts’ and creates global vectors of power, engaged in both empowerment and exploitation, in the production of both pride and profit. The study thereby contributes to the understanding of the increasingly complex power relations and the ambivalence and multiple effects of practices constituting the apparent shift from “pride” to “profit”. peerReviewed Article in Journal/Newspaper Sámi Lapland JYX - Jyväskylä University Digital Archive Social Semiotics 24 5 582 598
spellingShingle kielivähemmistöt
commodification
late capitalism
multimodal discourse analysis
Soveltava kielitiede
Applied Linguistics
kaupallistuminen
etnografia
diskurssianalyysi
käsityöt
kielelliset vähemmistöt
Dlaske, Kati
Semiotics of pride and profit: interrogating commodification in indigenous handicraft production
title Semiotics of pride and profit: interrogating commodification in indigenous handicraft production
title_full Semiotics of pride and profit: interrogating commodification in indigenous handicraft production
title_fullStr Semiotics of pride and profit: interrogating commodification in indigenous handicraft production
title_full_unstemmed Semiotics of pride and profit: interrogating commodification in indigenous handicraft production
title_short Semiotics of pride and profit: interrogating commodification in indigenous handicraft production
title_sort semiotics of pride and profit: interrogating commodification in indigenous handicraft production
topic kielivähemmistöt
commodification
late capitalism
multimodal discourse analysis
Soveltava kielitiede
Applied Linguistics
kaupallistuminen
etnografia
diskurssianalyysi
käsityöt
kielelliset vähemmistöt
topic_facet kielivähemmistöt
commodification
late capitalism
multimodal discourse analysis
Soveltava kielitiede
Applied Linguistics
kaupallistuminen
etnografia
diskurssianalyysi
käsityöt
kielelliset vähemmistöt
url http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201410293123