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Journal of Contemporary Ethnography
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Collective Witnessing

Performance, Drama, and Circulation of Valuables in the Rural Auction and Antiques Trade

Robert Jarvenpa

University at Albany, State University of New York

Rural American estate auctions represent a compelling interplay of market capitalism and local ceremonies of entrepreneurship. Auctions operate to move used goods, converting them into commodities. Yet they also "move" people, emotionally and dramaturgically, via socially constructed ceremonies in which knowledgeable specialists transform commodities into valuables and, in turn, invest the circulation of these valuables with profound personal, historical, and geographical meanings. The public, collective witnessing of this circulation lies at the heart of auction ethos, exemplifying the creative and symbolically charged nature of a ubiquitous facet of American consumer culture. These issues are addressed with case materials from recent active participation ethnographic research on the auction and antiques trade in upstate New York.

Key Words: American consumer culture • antiques trading • auction drama • biographies • connoisseurship • cultural economy

Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, Vol. 32, No. 5, 555-591 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/0891241603255676


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