Artisan ambiguities and the price...
Artisan ambiguities and the price of ethical production

Cultural Economy in the Kitchen por Philip Roscoe and Addie McGowan

Notas del episodio

Craft promises authenticity, care, and resistance to the anonymous churn of mass production. But what happens when ethical making becomes a luxury few can afford? Or when it's not possible to disentangle craft from commerce, if indeed it ever was? In this episode of Cultural Economy in the Kitchen, Philip Roscoe and Addie McGowan explore the ambiguities of craft with Dr Steve Marotta and Dr Ola Berta. From Portland maker workshops to the woven mats, and necklaces of the Marshall Islands, the conversation traces how handmade goods carry histories of colonialism, migration, nostalgia, and survival. Ola Berta reveals how weaving practices move between culture and commerce across rural atolls and diaspora communities, while Steve Marotta examines the moral economies of ethical production in post-industrial America. Together, the guests show craft not ... 

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Journal of Cultural Economyacademic journal podcastcapitalcraftcruel optimism