Eat Food from [Here]

The Talismanic Semiotics of Local Food

Authors

  • Susan D. Blum Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.71743/2vzdwx06

Keywords:

semiotics, indexicality, qualia, local food

Abstract

One especially illuminating aspect of a sign, according to contemporary linguistic anthropologists, is its indexical nature: signs gain meaning through logical or proximate association. And indexicality itself is multiple. In any given instance the potential associations are infinite but the actual associations are limited by a variety of perhaps contingent factors, discoverable not in advance but only through investigation. In demonstrating the multiple aspects (orders [Silverstein 2003], types [Ochs 1992], levels [Hanks 1992]) of indexicality of local food, I show that it indexes all at once location, contact, proximity, and multiple qualities (Chumley and Harkness 2013). As advertisers and others know (Luntz 2007, Puntoni, Schroeder, and Ritson 2010), the more positive associations that can be bundled into a single term, the more effective it can be. While only some advocates of local food would regard themselves as advertisers, virtually all see their task as promotion or education or advocacy, sometimes veering into marketing. Using my experience with a local food co-op, this analysis examines how local food is being employed as a multivariant indexical sign.

Two witches around a cauldron, one is tasting the contents, the other says 'I only use local children'.

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Published

2017-01-01

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Section

Articles

How to Cite

Blum, S. (2017). Eat Food from [Here]: The Talismanic Semiotics of Local Food. Semiotic Review, 5. https://doi.org/10.71743/2vzdwx06