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Joy in Labour: The Politicization of Craft from the Arts and Crafts Movement to Etsy

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Joy in Labour: The Politicization of Craft from the Arts and Crafts Movement to Etsy
Abstract
Since the time of the Arts and Crafts movement of the late nineteenth century, craft production and consumption has been politicized. Craft’s focus on hand making has been used to contrast intentional, individual labour with the division of labour involved in industrial mass production. Through its mission to build a more fulfilling world through ethical commerce, craftsmanship, and fun, the contemporary e-commerce site Etsy participates in the discourse of politicized craft that was articulated over a hundred years ago by William Morris, with his dream of “joy in labour.” While craft’s individualism can limit its political effectiveness, craft’s utopian impulse to build a better world through more fun and through labour that is more fair is a valuable ideal and one that has survived for more than a century.
Publication
Canadian Review of American Studies
Volume
44
Issue
2
Pages
281-301
Date
2014
Language
English
ISSN
1710-114X
Short Title
Joy in Labour
Accessed
8/1/18, 1:49 AM
Citation
Krugh, M. (2014). Joy in Labour: The Politicization of Craft from the Arts and Crafts Movement to Etsy. Canadian Review of American Studies, 44(2), 281–301. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/270056932_Joy_in_Labour_The_Politicization_of_Craft_from_the_Arts_and_Crafts_Movement_to_Etsy