View the Table of Contents. Read the Introduction.
"A superb collection of classic and contemporary readings on
commodification theory, including the latest, most advanced
theorizing on this subject. It is a must-read."
--Elizabeth Anderson, Philosophy, University of Michigan
"As someone who helped to draw attention to the subject of
commodification more than two decades ago, I believe that
commodification is, if anything, more important today than it has
ever been. We must ask ourselves: Are there some things that money
can't buy? Who is advantaged and who disadvantaged by desperate
market exchanges? This indispensable collection of old and new
thoughts on commodification will help us as we struggle towards
answering these questions."
--Margaret Jane Radin, Stanford Law School
""Rethinking Commodification" includes several classic texts of
commodification theory that familiarize readers with the
traditional debate. The work then offers new insights into the
issue, with two dozen articles, appellate court opinions, and
essays. Taken together, this book comprises an intellecutal mosaic
that moves the discussion beyond the early, on-off question of
whether or not to commodify."
--"Metapsychology Online"
"A magnificent collection. The subject is profound and complex,
the text gripping, lively, and thoroughly enjoyable to read."
--Sylvia A. Law, NYU Law School
"Commodification is on net a great source for good in the world.
But the seminal essays in Rethinking Commodification show that the
serious questions about alienability are much more than concerns
about hypothetical contracts for babies or self-indenture.a
--Ian Ayres, author of "Insincere Promises"
Whatis the price of a limb? A child? Ethnicity? Love? In a world
that is often ruled by buyers and sellers, those things that are
often considered priceless become objects to be marketed and from
which to earn a profit. Ranging from black market babies to
exploitative sex trade operations to the marketing of race and
culture, Rethinking Commodification presents an interdisciplinary
collection of writings, including legal theory, case law, and
original essays to reexamine the traditional legal question: aTo
commodify or not to commodify?a
In this pathbreaking course reader, Martha M. Ertman and Joan C.
Williams present the legal cases and theories that laid the
groundwork for traditional critiques of commodification, which tend
to view the process as dehumanizing because it reduces all human
interactions to economic transactions. This acanonicala section is
followed by a selection of original essays that present alternative
views of commodification based on the concept that commodification
can have diverse meanings in a variety of social contexts. When
viewed in this way, the commodification debate moves beyond whether
or not commodification is good or bad, and is assessed instead on
the quality of the social relationships and wider context that is
involved in the transaction. Rethinking Commodification contains an
excellent array of contemporary issues, including intellectual
property, reparations for slavery, organ transplants, and sex work;
and an equally stellar array of contributors, including Richard
Posner, Margaret Jane Radin, Regina Austin, and many others.
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