Ecologies of Valuation

When used consumer goods are exchanged, valuation proceeds differently than in markets for new goods. Many studies emphasize the social or socio-technical nature of valuation processes. This article outlines the difficulties inherent in these approaches when it comes to understanding valuation of u...

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Main Author: Emma Greeson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Linköping University Electronic Press 2020-07-01
Series:Valuation Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://valuationstudies.liu.se/article/view/185
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spelling doaj-d26748f0ee0d4a5c978af8e1f4d883f02020-11-25T03:28:55ZengLinköping University Electronic PressValuation Studies2001-59922020-07-017210.3384/VS.2001-5992.2020.7.2.167-196Ecologies of ValuationEmma Greeson0Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle, Germany, When used consumer goods are exchanged, valuation proceeds differently than in markets for new goods. Many studies emphasize the social or socio-technical nature of valuation processes. This article outlines the difficulties inherent in these approaches when it comes to understanding valuation of used goods. These approaches, somewhat paradoxically, obscure the greater situatedness of contextualized “moments of valuation” in material flows and in relation to production processes. The ecological approach developed here shows that moments of valuation are never divorced from temporally and spatially prior and subsequent moments of valuation and waste production, and cannot be fully understood if not considered alongside the conditions in which the goods being valued are produced. The subtractive logic of ridding is crucial in the processes of production and valuation of used goods. This article draws on ethnographic and interview data from fourteen months of fieldwork in England to show how used books are valued in an ecology that stretches across connected moments and sites.  https://valuationstudies.liu.se/article/view/185valuationwasteused clothingqualificationecology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emma Greeson
spellingShingle Emma Greeson
Ecologies of Valuation
Valuation Studies
valuation
waste
used clothing
qualification
ecology
author_facet Emma Greeson
author_sort Emma Greeson
title Ecologies of Valuation
title_short Ecologies of Valuation
title_full Ecologies of Valuation
title_fullStr Ecologies of Valuation
title_full_unstemmed Ecologies of Valuation
title_sort ecologies of valuation
publisher Linköping University Electronic Press
series Valuation Studies
issn 2001-5992
publishDate 2020-07-01
description When used consumer goods are exchanged, valuation proceeds differently than in markets for new goods. Many studies emphasize the social or socio-technical nature of valuation processes. This article outlines the difficulties inherent in these approaches when it comes to understanding valuation of used goods. These approaches, somewhat paradoxically, obscure the greater situatedness of contextualized “moments of valuation” in material flows and in relation to production processes. The ecological approach developed here shows that moments of valuation are never divorced from temporally and spatially prior and subsequent moments of valuation and waste production, and cannot be fully understood if not considered alongside the conditions in which the goods being valued are produced. The subtractive logic of ridding is crucial in the processes of production and valuation of used goods. This article draws on ethnographic and interview data from fourteen months of fieldwork in England to show how used books are valued in an ecology that stretches across connected moments and sites. 
topic valuation
waste
used clothing
qualification
ecology
url https://valuationstudies.liu.se/article/view/185
work_keys_str_mv AT emmagreeson ecologiesofvaluation
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