Consumer Culture and PostmodernismSAGE Publications, 2007 M08 10 - 203 pages 'It is great to see the re-publication of the classic Consumer Culture and Postmodernism. The extensive new material is erudite, informative and important, particularly locating consumer culture in the context of global climate change and postmodernism within a framing that seriously displaces the 'west' from centre-stage' - John Urry, Lancaster University The first edition of this contemporary classic can claim to have put 'consumer culture' on the map, certainly in relation to postmodernism. This expanded new edition includes: - A fully revised preface that explores the developments in consumer culture since the first edition - A major new chapter on 'Modernity and the Cultural Question' - An update on postmodernism and the development of contemporary theory after postmodernism - An account of multiple and alternative modernities - The challenges of consumer culture in Japan and China The result is a book that shakes the boundaries of debate, from one of the foremost writers on culture and postmodernism of the present day. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 55
Page 14
... range of goods , then from the perspec- tive of some twentieth - century neo - Marxists this development is regarded as producing greater opportunities for controlled arid manipulated con- sumption . The expansion of capitalist ...
... range of goods , then from the perspec- tive of some twentieth - century neo - Marxists this development is regarded as producing greater opportunities for controlled arid manipulated con- sumption . The expansion of capitalist ...
Page 29
... range of journals in the English - speaking world since the 1970s which have become open to theo- rizations of culture which draw their audiences from a wide range of disci- plines . Some deal exclusively with culture . Here we can ...
... range of journals in the English - speaking world since the 1970s which have become open to theo- rizations of culture which draw their audiences from a wide range of disci- plines . Some deal exclusively with culture . Here we can ...
Page 136
... range of the humanities and the social sci- ences . Apart from a sense of the impossibility of grasping the sheer range of subjects and orientations on view , we have to face the implications of this shift , which is also taking place ...
... range of the humanities and the social sci- ences . Apart from a sense of the impossibility of grasping the sheer range of subjects and orientations on view , we have to face the implications of this shift , which is also taking place ...
Contents
Definitions and Interpretations | 1 |
Theories of Consumer Culture | 13 |
Towards a Sociology of Postmodern Culture | 28 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
academic aesthetic aestheticization of everyday argued artistic and intellectual audiences avant-garde Baudelaire Baudrillard become Bourdieu carnivalesque central centres century changes China cities common culture concept consumer culture consumption contemporary critical cultural capital cultural intermediaries cultural sphere Culture & Society discussion economic effect Elias emergence emotional emphasis enclaved entails ernism example expansion experience fashion Featherstone flâneur forms gentrification global groups Habermas Hence high culture Ikegami images interest Jameson Japan knowledge lifestyle Lyotard mass culture means metanarratives Metrocentre middle class Ming Dynasty modernity modes Norbert Elias notion particular petite bourgeoisie popular culture postmod postmodern architecture postmodern art postmodern culture practices public sphere question R.H. Williams range refer role Scott Lash sense shift signs simulations social sociology specialists in symbolic structure style sumer symbol specialists symbolic hierarchies symbolic production taste tendencies theory tion Tokugawa tradition tural ture urban Western