Volume 109, Issue 4 p. 626-641

“Our Beer”: Ethnographic Brands in Postsocialist Georgia

PAUL MANNING

PAUL MANNING

Department of Anthropology, Trent University, Peterborough, ON, Canada K9J 7B8

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ANN UPLISASHVILI

ANN UPLISASHVILI

Faculty of Social Sciences, Chavchavadze State University, Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia

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First published: December 2007
Citations: 57

Abstract

Although Georgia is known for its wines, industrial production of beer far outstrips industrial wine production for local markets: wine consumption occurs in ritual contexts in which new wine, typically purchased from peasant producers, is preferred; bottled, aged wines are primarily for exports. Beer, therefore, is a key area in which industrial production for indigenous consumers has been elaborated. Such goods are packaged and presented as being both ecologically “pure” and following “traditional” methods, often referencing “ethnographic” materials about traditional life in brand images, even as they proclaim their reliance on Western technologies.