ABSTRACT

Branding is a profoundly geographical type of commodification process. Many things become commodities that are compared and valuated on markets around the globe. Places such as cities or regions, countries and nations attempt to acquire visibility through branding. Geographical imaginations are evoked to brand goods and places as commodities in order to show or create connections and add value. Yet, not all that is branded was originally intended and created for markets.

This volume aims to broaden current understanding of branding through a series of contributions from geography, history, political studies, cultural, and media studies, offering insight into how ordinary places, objects and practices become commodities through branding. In so doing, the contributions also show how nation, place and product as targets of branding can be seen as intertwined. To discuss these forms of branding, book chapters refer to states, cities, holiday destinations, food malls, movies, dances, post stamps and other items that serve as brands and/or are branded.

The book will be of interest to students and scholars in geography, sociology, history, cultural studies and business studies who would like to gain an understanding of the intricate and surprising ways in which things, places, and cultural practices become brands.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Branding the nation, the place, the product

chapter 1|14 pages

Origination

The geographies of brands and branding

chapter 2|23 pages

The state branding of US postage stamps for state commemorative years

From heritage, iconography and place to placelessness

chapter 3|14 pages

Ghostly cities

Some notes on urban branding and the imagining of places

chapter 4|24 pages

Becoming Eataly

The magic of the mall and the magic of the brand

chapter 6|14 pages

Tango Argentino as nation brand

chapter 8|18 pages

Promoting the nation in Austria and Switzerland

A pre-history of nation branding