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From craft to industry and back: transnational efforts in reconstructing tin’s social meaning to the retail consumer (1950s–1960s)

Yen Nie Yong (Graduate School of Economics, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan)

Journal of Historical Research in Marketing

ISSN: 1755-750X

Article publication date: 11 August 2023

Issue publication date: 14 August 2023

43

Abstract

Purpose

Commodity histories generally posit colonies’ roles as mere producers but have overlooked their roles in shaping global consumption. This study aims to investigate how Malayan tin producers and British colonial institutions used public relations and advertising strategies as entrepreneurial tools to fend off competition from substitutes amid global economic and geopolitical transitions during the height of the Cold War crisis and post-war boom in the 1950s and 1960s.

Design/methodology/approach

This study draws on archival research of newspaper reports written in Singapore, the USA and Britain from the inter-war years until the 1960s. It also consults advertisements placed by the Malayan Tin Bureau on Time and Scientific American, data and views on tin scarcity by US congressional reports and commodity trends data published by the US Department of Commerce and the US Department of the Interior.

Findings

This paper demonstrates how the value of tin is recreated by manipulating its symbolic meanings and embedding them within the national and political contexts of the targeted consumer markets. This creative resistance against tin substitution was enacted through a transnational collaboration among colonial institutions, entrepreneurs in colonies and marketing strategists across geographies and territories.

Research implications

This paper provokes further reflections on the importance of socially constructed meanings in shaping the market value of a product and the understanding of embedded political value systems in marketing generic commodities. Future research may adopt this perspective to reassess the framing of meanings of commodities in the contemporary setting, especially against rising concerns on the sustainability of mining natural resources, including minerals.

Originality

This study integrates the perspectives of Malayan tin producers in reframing the meaning of a commodity and so, widens the scope of historical analyses of commodities beyond the industrialized global North. It reassesses how a commodity’s marketing value evolves and interacts with colonial politics. It also highlights the collaborative nature of colonial governments and local producers in developing new uses and representations of a generic commodity to create new markets for its consumption.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author wishes to thank Professor Kurosawa Takafumi and Dr Steven Edward Ivings for their guidance in writing this article, Special thanks also to Professor Espen Storli for his constructive comments on an earlier version of this manuscript presented at the “Natural Resources and Imperial Anxieties” panel discussion held during the Business History Conference 2022, as well as to fellow presenters Rob Konkel and Jordan Howell.

Citation

Yong, Y.N. (2023), "From craft to industry and back: transnational efforts in reconstructing tin’s social meaning to the retail consumer (1950s–1960s)", Journal of Historical Research in Marketing, Vol. 15 No. 2, pp. 121-143. https://doi.org/10.1108/JHRM-11-2022-0033

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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