commodification
Appearance
See also: commoditize
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From commodify + -ification.
Noun
[edit]commodification (countable and uncountable, plural commodifications)
- The assignment of a commercial value to something previously valueless.
- 2006, Ross Haenfler, Straight Edge: Hardcore Punk, Clean-Living Youth, and Social Change:
- Subcultures tend to go through continual cycles of commodification and resistance to that commodification.
- 2023 November 21, Megan K. Stack, “Is Ireland Headed for a Merger?”, in The New York Times[1]:
- One drizzly morning, I joined a political walking tour to hear former combatants of the Troubles show off Belfast landmarks and tell their stories. Almost everything about this notion piqued my curiosity: the commodification of violence into a tourist product; the idea that “politics” was actually history.
Usage notes
[edit]Sometimes used interchangeably with commoditization, sometimes distinguished to have a sense of “non-commercial good becoming commercial”; see commoditize#Usage notes.