A socio-semiotic perspective on Australian gourmet products/services:‘Made in Australia’ marketing strategies
Keywords:
commensality, communication, identity, marketing, social-semioticsAbstract
In a consumerist society, the contemporary needs of individuals have been transformed into desires; people nowadays seek into improving quality of life through unique experiences, by speculating their senses, in a grammar of both hedonist and utilitarian reasons. As such, taste becomes a social signifier that reunites people at the same table, where positioning oneself in the created micro-society, represents commensality and a major key in marketing studies. Another important aspect in F&B - as a socially (pre)determined marker – is that individuals are involved in naming their experiences, i.e. in marketing terms, branding a story, which eventually translates an identity. In this paper, my aim is to demonstrate how F&B Australian successful entrepreneurs (re)created a national identity, by fashioning the imagery of taste and linguistics, shaped by the semiosis of local flavors and colors, eventually all packaged in a narrative of marketing. Moreover, this is a study case of an economic national strategy – patriotic marketing, applied in F&B, and, paradoxically enough, exploited within tourism practices. Eventually, this research is also prone to describe the social-semiotic aspect of the ‘signe gustatif’ that frames the meaning of the dish and its social effects in the table’s process of communication.Downloads
Published
15.01.2013
How to Cite
Craciunescu, A. (2013). A socio-semiotic perspective on Australian gourmet products/services:‘Made in Australia’ marketing strategies. Ecoforum Journal, 2(1), 3. Retrieved from https://ecoforumjournal.ro/index.php/eco/article/view/2208
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