Sign value

This article is about the concept of sign value as recognized by sociologists and economists. For numeral signs having additive values, see Sign-value notation. For a representation of signed numbers in computers, see Signed number representations.

In sociology and in economics, the term sign value denotes and describes the value accorded to an object because of the prestige (social status) that it imparts upon the possessor, rather than the material value and utility derived from the function and the primary use of the object. For example, the buyer of a Rolls-Royce limousine might partly value the automobile as transport, yet might also value it as a sign that signifies his or her wealth to a particular community and to society in general. The automobile’s transport-function is primary, from which arises its use-value, whilst the social prestige function is secondary, from which arises its sign-value.

The French sociologist Jean Baudrillard proposed the Theory of Sign Value as a philosophic and economic counterpart to the dichotomy of exchange-value vs. use-value, which Karl Marx recognized as a characteristic of capitalism as an economic system.[1]

In popular culture

In The Sims video game, furniture and room furnishings (decorations) are identified and labelled as possessing “room-enhancing value” that is treated as a form of sign value.[2]

References

  1. "Jean Baudrillard". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008-12-24.
  2. "Gamestudies - Signifying Play: The Sims and the Sociology of Interior Design". 2008-12-24.
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