Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal
Abstract
Alpha brands are the most influential global brands that possess significant configurations of meanings and can offer peculiarly powerful affirmations of belonging and recognition in the lives of their consumers. The trademark, as the visual source-designating emblem of a brand, is also a semiotic sign that resonates with the structure of myths and archetypes within a cultural environment of desire. Focusing on the world-renowned Louis Vuitton trademark, this Article explores how an understanding of semiotics can be useful to a legal analysis of trademarks. Two decisions involving the iconic Louis Vuitton brand one from the United States and one from Singapore-are used as case studies to illustrate how an appreciation of its ideological codings may be relevant to courts in trademark litigation. It is contended that an understanding of the semiotic nature of a trademark can better help courts decide if these recodings are predominantly parasitic (and therefore infringing trademark laws) or primarily expressive (and thus excused from liability). The Article concludes that useful relevant insights may be gleaned from an understanding of contemporary production, circulation and consumption of the alpha brand to assist in a more nuanced but doctrinally focused understanding of trademark laws.
Disciplines
Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law | Law
Recommended Citation
David Tan,
The Semiotics of Alpha Brands: Encoding/Decoding/Recoding/Transcoding of Louis Vuitton and Implications for Trademark Laws,
32
Cardozo Arts & Ent. L.J.
225
(2013).
Available at:
https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/cardozoaelj/vol32/iss1/7