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Trading in unicorns: the role of exchange etiquette in managing the online second-hand sale of sentimental babywearing wraps

Trading in unicorns: the role of exchange etiquette in managing the online second-hand sale of sentimental babywearing wraps
Trading in unicorns: the role of exchange etiquette in managing the online second-hand sale of sentimental babywearing wraps
Since the 1970s, an international market has been growing in the production and sale of fabric specifically woven for ‘babywearing’. These ‘wraps’, a simple piece of cloth for baby carrying, have a long tradition throughout the world but are increasingly marketed to ‘high-end’ collectors as well as ‘modern’ young parents. New releases of limited edition and boutique ranges create competition over highly desirable and often quite unattainable wraps that must be tempted out or awaited in the second-hand forums. The community describes the search for these desperately desired goods as the search for ‘unicorns’. But obtaining one’s unicorn requires others to part with material objects made incommensurable through the intimate, inter-embodied ‘skinship’ practice of wrapping and carrying a child. This article explores how the emotional entanglement of these second-hand goods is negotiated through an emerging exchange etiquette that attempts to protect the illusion that one is trading in incommensurable goods
1359-1835
297-316
Djohari, Natalie
90a32268-7e26-45f3-bd47-db9d5a3250ce
Djohari, Natalie
90a32268-7e26-45f3-bd47-db9d5a3250ce

Djohari, Natalie (2016) Trading in unicorns: the role of exchange etiquette in managing the online second-hand sale of sentimental babywearing wraps. Journal of Material Culture, 21 (3), 297-316. (doi:10.1177/1359183515619455).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Since the 1970s, an international market has been growing in the production and sale of fabric specifically woven for ‘babywearing’. These ‘wraps’, a simple piece of cloth for baby carrying, have a long tradition throughout the world but are increasingly marketed to ‘high-end’ collectors as well as ‘modern’ young parents. New releases of limited edition and boutique ranges create competition over highly desirable and often quite unattainable wraps that must be tempted out or awaited in the second-hand forums. The community describes the search for these desperately desired goods as the search for ‘unicorns’. But obtaining one’s unicorn requires others to part with material objects made incommensurable through the intimate, inter-embodied ‘skinship’ practice of wrapping and carrying a child. This article explores how the emotional entanglement of these second-hand goods is negotiated through an emerging exchange etiquette that attempts to protect the illusion that one is trading in incommensurable goods

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More information

Published date: 1 September 2016
Additional Information: © The Author(s) 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 472017
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472017
ISSN: 1359-1835
PURE UUID: cc019cd6-2a32-4106-9333-231a6207ef63
ORCID for Natalie Djohari: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7636-2863

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Date deposited: 23 Nov 2022 18:00
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:16

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Author: Natalie Djohari ORCID iD

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