Online Google Dictionary

commodified 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/kəˈmädəˌfī/,
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commodifies, 3rd person singular present; commodifying, present participle; commodified, past tense; commodified, past participle;
  1. Turn into or treat as a commodity
    • - art has become commodified

  1. Commodification (or commoditization) is the transformation of goods and services (or things that may not normally be regarded as goods or services) into a commodity.
  2. (commodification) The assignment of a commercial value to something previously valueless
  3. (commodify) To make something into a commodity, sometimes at the expense of its intrinsic value
  4. (Commodification) Rendering any artifact, action, object, or idea into something that can be bought or sold. Popular culture is often maligned for its commodification of formerly more authentic cultural forms, with the assumption that through commodification things lose their implicit value.
  5. (Commodification) Derived predominantly from the work of anthropologist Dick Hebdige, this describes process by which a culture’s symbols, artefacts and identity is absorbed and reconstructed by the process of market exchange and popularisation. ...
  6. (COMMODIFICATION) A Marxist concept that describes all things in a society (even people) as commodities. All material and social phenomena are products of a society and contribute to the production of other components in that society. ...
  7. (Commodification) Tendency to turn goods and services, even land and labor, into products for sale in market; used critically to describe loss of human qualities in capitalist production and exchange
  8. (Commodification) The trend of standardizing business processes, IT Services and application services enabling businesses to intelligently buy at the right price. Allows a wide range of businesses access to services previously only available to large corporations.
  9. (Commodification) process through which something is given monetary value (e.g., bottled water).
  10. (commodification) The conversion of a living being, principle, or natural environment into an "object" that is used, exchanged, or consumed for profit or other desired gain (HumaneMyth.org).
  11. (commodification) The process by which an object or person becomes a commodity. Capitalist society, which is structured around economic exchange, is seen by many critics to commodify the whole world.
  12. (commodification) the subordination of public and private realms to the logic of capitalism.  In other words, to say certain things (e.g., friendship, women) have become "commodified" is to say they are now valued primarily for their commercial value. ...
  13. Commodification is the commercialization of an object or activity that is not inherently commercial [1].  The human body, especially women’s bodies, are frequently commodified in the media in order to sell products.  Think about the links between viewing people as products and health. ...
  14. (Commodify) from 'commodity', to make something subject to market forces.  Generally used pejoratively, as when Marxists claim that capitalism has commodified labor, or when Feminists claim that prostitution, pornography or paid surrogacy commodify women's bodies.