从工艺到工业再到工业:重构锡对零售消费者的社会意义的跨国努力(1950 - 60年代)

Yen Nie Yong
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的商品历史通常认为殖民地只是生产者,但忽视了它们在塑造全球消费中的作用。本研究旨在调查在20世纪50年代和60年代冷战危机和战后繁荣时期,马来亚锡生产商和英国殖民机构如何利用公共关系和广告策略作为创业工具,在全球经济和地缘政治转型中抵御来自替代品的竞争对新加坡、美国和英国从战争年代到20世纪60年代的报纸报道进行研究。它还查阅了马来亚锡局在《时代与科学美国人》上刊登的广告,美国国会报告中关于锡稀缺的数据和观点以及美国商务部和美国内政部发布的商品趋势数据。本文展示了如何通过操纵锡的象征意义并将其嵌入目标消费市场的国家和政治背景中来重新创造锡的价值。这种对锡替代的创造性抵制是通过殖民地机构、殖民地企业家和跨地区营销战略家之间的跨国合作实现的。研究含义本文引发了对社会建构意义在塑造产品市场价值方面的重要性的进一步思考,以及对普通商品营销中嵌入的政治价值体系的理解。未来的研究可能会采用这种观点来重新评估商品在当代环境中的意义框架,特别是在对包括矿产在内的自然资源开采的可持续性日益担忧的情况下。独创性这项研究融合了马来亚锡生产商的观点,重新定义了商品的含义,从而将商品的历史分析范围扩大到工业化的全球北方之外。它重新评估了商品的营销价值如何演变以及与殖民政治的互动。它还强调了殖民地政府和当地生产商在开发通用商品的新用途和代表性以创造新的消费市场方面的合作性质。
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From craft to industry and back: transnational efforts in reconstructing tin’s social meaning to the retail consumer (1950s–1960s)
Purpose Commodity histories generally posit colonies’ roles as mere producers but have overlooked their roles in shaping global consumption. This study aims to investigate how Malayan tin producers and British colonial institutions used public relations and advertising strategies as entrepreneurial tools to fend off competition from substitutes amid global economic and geopolitical transitions during the height of the Cold War crisis and post-war boom in the 1950s and 1960s. Design/methodology/approach This study draws on archival research of newspaper reports written in Singapore, the USA and Britain from the inter-war years until the 1960s. It also consults advertisements placed by the Malayan Tin Bureau on Time and Scientific American, data and views on tin scarcity by US congressional reports and commodity trends data published by the US Department of Commerce and the US Department of the Interior. Findings This paper demonstrates how the value of tin is recreated by manipulating its symbolic meanings and embedding them within the national and political contexts of the targeted consumer markets. This creative resistance against tin substitution was enacted through a transnational collaboration among colonial institutions, entrepreneurs in colonies and marketing strategists across geographies and territories. Research implications This paper provokes further reflections on the importance of socially constructed meanings in shaping the market value of a product and the understanding of embedded political value systems in marketing generic commodities. Future research may adopt this perspective to reassess the framing of meanings of commodities in the contemporary setting, especially against rising concerns on the sustainability of mining natural resources, including minerals. Originality This study integrates the perspectives of Malayan tin producers in reframing the meaning of a commodity and so, widens the scope of historical analyses of commodities beyond the industrialized global North. It reassesses how a commodity’s marketing value evolves and interacts with colonial politics. It also highlights the collaborative nature of colonial governments and local producers in developing new uses and representations of a generic commodity to create new markets for its consumption.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
33.30%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: Launched in 2009, Journal of Historical Research in Marketing is the only quarterly, peer-reviewed journal publishing high quality, original, academic research that focuses entirely on marketing history and the history of marketing thought. Pedagogical and historiographical / methodological essays are also welcome as long as they are grounded in a marketing and historical context. The essence of an historical perspective is a thorough, systematic, critical awareness of the changes (or continuity) in events over time and of the context in which change or continuity occurs. In addition to regular full length research articles, the Journal occasionally features material under the following sections. Explorations & Insights includes invited commentaries about marketing history and the history of marketing thought. These tend to be shorter (three to six thousand words) than the full articles that run in each issue. Sources of Historical Research in Marketing includes short essays introducing unexplored and novel archives and other primary historical resources, their contents and relevance to marketing history. Archivists or library professionals who believe their collections might be of interest to marketing historians are invited to submit essays to contribute to this section. JHRM also invites historical review essays that focus on historically important marketing books under the section Forgotten Classics. Examples of these historical reviews can be found in past issues of the Journal and those suggest an approach for potential submissions. Authors are advised to check with the editor about the suitability of a book title before submitting a Forgotten Classics review for consideration.
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