1 / 16

Harry Potter and the Commodity Fetish: Activating Corporate Readings

Harry Potter and the Commodity Fetish: Activating Corporate Readings i n the Journey from Text to Commercial Intertext. Jarrod Waetjen & Timothy A. Gibson. Harry Potter.

spike
Download Presentation

Harry Potter and the Commodity Fetish: Activating Corporate Readings

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Harry Potter and the Commodity Fetish: Activating Corporate Readings in the Journey from Text to Commercial Intertext Jarrod Waetjen & Timothy A. Gibson

  2. Harry Potter “The central premise of Rowling’s books is that, in modern England (and, as we learn later, around the world) a parallel society of wizards, witches, and magical creatures lives among the non-magic (or ‘‘muggle’’) world, though they usually escape our attention through a variety of clever means” (Waetjen, Jarrod, Timothy Gibson 2007, 8).

  3. “Rowling herself has been quoted many times as being uncomfortable with the idea of Harry Potter’s wholesale commercialization” (Waetjen, Jarrod, Timothy Gibson 2007, 6). “Nonetheless, she was well positioned to profit handsomely from it” (Waetjen, Jarrod, Timothy Gibson 2007, 7).

  4. Class : obvious distinction of social class. • Racial elements: “pure bloods” vs “mudblood”

  5. “What we will discover is that the two worlds within which Harry Potter moves*the non-magical (‘‘muggle’’) world and the magical wizardingworld are both structured profoundly by class privilege” (Waetjen, Jarrod, Timothy Gibson 2007, 5). “Yet, at least within the first six texts (there is one more to come), Rowling’s vivid depictions of class inequality exist alongside a contradictory discourse of wealth and accumulation, on in which Harry’s own (accidental) wealth leads to exciting forms of consumption that earn Harry the admiration of his peers” (Waetjen, Jarrod, Timothy Gibson 2007, 5).

  6. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xgjdsy1MpR0 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81scFUYQGbU

  7. Why do you think they have money and a commercial hub (Diagon Alley) if they have magic and can get anything with it?

  8. Class • Race • Economical Status http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EvWihzwI2uY

  9. House Elves “These creatures find their greatest happiness in using their considerable magical powers to serve their masters and consider payment for their work or release from their voluntary slavery as insults” (Waetjen, Jarrod, Timothy Gibson 2007, 12). “Dobby has no master, dobby is a free elf”

  10. Dobby Kreacher

  11. Why are some wizards poor and some are rich?

  12. Because there is consumption in the wizarding world there is advertisments. • "Let your fingers do the walking " - Yellow Pages • "The tastiest snack you’ve never tried " - Sun Chips • ‘‘No Pain, No Stain,’’ - Skower’s All-Purpose Magical Mess Remover

  13. Consumers into Harry’s world, not Harry into the consumers world.

  14. http://www.universalorlando.com/Theme-Parks/Islands-of-Adventure/Wizarding-World-of-Harry-Potter.aspxhttp://www.universalorlando.com/Theme-Parks/Islands-of-Adventure/Wizarding-World-of-Harry-Potter.aspx http://www.harrypottershop.com/category/wands+%26+collectibles.do?nType=1

  15. “By strategically selecting andamplifying Rowling’s celebratory descriptions of magical commodities, AOL Time Warner’s commercial intertext elides Harry’s time with the Dursleys and labors to bring consumers into the wizardingworld, where commodities are produced ‘‘by magic’’ and never fail to deliver on their advertised promises” (Waetjen, Jarrod, Timothy Gibson 2007, 21).

  16. Harry is a consumer. We want to consume the same products Harry consumes. That is what AOL Time Warner is selling.

More Related