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Flea market
Street market or bazaar for used items
Street market or bazaar for used items
A flea market (or swap meet) is a type of street market that provides space for vendors to sell (generally previously owned) goods. This type of market is often seasonal. However, in recent years there has been the development of 'formal' and 'casual' markets which divides a fixed-style market (formal) with long-term leases and a seasonal-style market with short-term leases. Consistently, there tends to be an emphasis on sustainable consumption whereby items such as used goods, collectibles, antiques and vintage clothing can be purchased, in an effort to combat climate change and fast fashion.
Flea market vending is distinguished from street vending in that the market alone, and not any other public attraction, brings in buyers. There are a variety of vendors: some part-time who consider their work at flea markets a hobby due to their possession of an alternative job; full-time vendors who dedicate all their time to their stalls and collection of merchandise and rely solely on the profits made at the market. Vendors require skill in following retro and vintage trends, as well as selecting merchandise which connects with the culture and identity of their customers.
In the United States, the National Association of Flea Markets was established in 1998, which provides various resources for sellers, suppliers and buyers and also provides a means for suppliers and sellers to communicate and form affiliations.
Origin of the term
Flea market is a common English calque from the French marché aux puces, which literally translates to "market with fleas", labelled as such because the items sold were previously owned and worn, likely containing fleas. The first reference to this term appeared in two conflicting stories about a location in Paris in the 1860s which was known as the "marché aux puces".
The traditional and most-publicized story is in the article "What Is a Flea Market?" by Albert LaFarge in the 1998 winter edition of Today's Flea Market magazine:
The second story appeared in the book Flea Markets, published in Europe by Chartwell Books, reading in its introduction: The Paris Flea Market is the world's largest concentration of antique dealers and second-hand dealers, totaling more than 5 million visitors per year.
Regional names
In the United States, an outdoor swap meet is the equivalent of a flea market. However, an indoor swap meet is the equivalent of a bazaar, a permanent, indoor shopping center open during normal retail hours, with fixed booths or storefronts for the vendors.
Different English-speaking countries use various names for flea markets. In Australian English, they are also called 'trash and treasure markets', while the term 'swap meet' is used for a market held primarily to sell car- and motorcycle parts and automobilia. In Philippine English, the word is tianggê from the word tianguis via Mexican Spanish coming from Nahuatl. Despite common misconception, it is not derived from Hokkien. The word supplants the indigenous term talipapâ. In India, it is known as gurjari or shrukawadi bazaar or even as juna bazaar in Pune.
In the United Kingdom, they are known as car boot sales if the event takes place in a field or car park, as the vendors will sell goods from the boot (or 'trunk' in American English) of their car. If the event is held indoors, such as a school or church hall, then it is usually known as either a jumble sale, or a bring and buy sale. In Quebec and France, they are often called Marché aux puces (literally "flea market"), while in French-speaking areas of Belgium, the name brocante or vide-grenier is normally used.
In German, there are many words in use but the most common word is "Flohmarkt", meaning literally "flea market". The same applies to Dutch "vlooienmarkt", Swedish "loppmarknad" and Finnish "kirpputori". In the predominantly Cuban/Hispanic areas of South Florida, they are called [el] pulguero ("[the] flea store") from pulga, the Spanish word for fleas. In the Southern part of Andalusia, due to the influence of Gibraltar English, they are known as "piojito", which means "little louse". In Chile they can be called persas or mercados persa ("persian market") and ferias libres, if mostly selling fruit and vegetables. In Argentina they are most likely called "feria artesanal" (artisan's or street fair) or "feria americana" (American fair), the latter name is due to have taken the idea from their United States counterpart.
In Moroccan Darija, the term for "flea market" is جوطية juṭiyya, which either derives from French jeter or jetable (throwable), or is an older term derived from جوقة juqa meaning "gathering of people". An ancient village on the bank of Sebou River by the name جوطة "Juta" may have been a big medieval market.
In the Philippines "Tiangges" or bazaar shopping is famous in spacious markets like Divisoria, Greenhills, and Baclaran. It features rows of stalls with displays for sale of variety items like clothes, accessories, gadgets at incredibly low prices.
Gallery
File:Paris - Vintage travel gear seller at the marche Dauphine - 5212.jpg|A vintage travel gear seller at Marché Dauphine, Saint-Ouen, the home of Paris' flea market File:Flohmarkt2.JPG|A flea market in Germany File:Jyväskylä - Seppälä flea market.jpg|Flea market in Seppälä, Jyväskylä, Finland File:Kuopio market place 2011.jpg|A flea market on the Kuopio Market Square in Finland File:Vendor display at Brooklyn Flea.jpg|Vendor display at the Brooklyn Flea File:Bazaarchitecture8 (4061032054).jpg|The Chor Bazaar in Mumbai, India File:Shimokitazawa174 (3737061480).jpg|In Shimokitazawa, Japan File:ErfgoedLeiden LEI001016609 Vlooienmarkt.jpg|Flea market (Leiden, end of the 19th century) File:Beaudesert Swap Meet.jpg|alt=A large swap meet held in Beaudesert, Queensland, Australia|A large swap meet held in Beaudesert, Queensland, Australia File:Flea market (47846983882).jpg|"juṭiyya" (flea market) in Fez, Morocco File:Pasar Karat Kota Damansara at Seksyen 3 Kota Damansara 20231119 084111.jpg|Flea market in Malaysia
References
References
- "flea market {{!}} Definition of flea market in English by Oxford Dictionaries".
- L., D.. (2006). "Editorial Perspectives: Flea Markets". Science & Society.
- Appelgren, Staffan. (2015). "Introduction: Circulating Stuff through Second-hand, Vintage and Retro Markets". Culture Unbound.
- "What is the origin of the term 'flea ... {{!}} Oxford Dictionaries".
- Prieto, J. (2007). "[http://www.hollisflea.com/flea_market_history.html Flea Market History] {{Webarchive. link. (2023-04-19 ". Hollis Flea Market. Retrieved February 12, 2012.)
- "Paris Flea Market. Hours. Map. Metro". Paris Digest.
- (28 February 2019). "Las Vegas' epic secondhand shops, antique stores and swap meets are a thrifter's paradise". [[Las Vegas Sun]].
- (8 July 1992). "Tensions, Bargains Share Space at Indoor Swap Meets : Bazaars: Businesses that survived riots are prospering. But some say they sell shoddy goods and stir racial strife".
- (17 August 2014). "Young businesses thrive in indoor swap meets".
- (2007). "Americanismos en las Indias del Poniente: Voces de origen indígena Americano en las lenguas del Pacífico". Vervuert.
- "Tagalong Lang". Tagaloglang.com.
- (24 March 2013). "Rabat flea market".
- "Ministry of Habous and Islamic Affairs, Morocco, Qisariyya and its sister terms".
- (September 18, 2023). "What you need to know about tiangge shopping in the Philippines". [[Philippine Daily Inquirer]].
- LaFarge, A.. (2000). "U.S. Flea Market Directory, 3rd Edition: A Guide to the Best Flea Markets in All 50 States". St. Martin's Press.
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