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About The Book
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<p>This book provides a clear and wide-ranging overview of consumption as a sociological concept. Arguing that consumption is both an unavoidable part of life and an ongoing dialectical process it gives a critical assessment of a range of theoretical approaches to the study of consumption and the possibilities these frameworks can offer.</p><p>Consumption is something we all do. It is not just another word for shopping. When we eat and drink or when we read a book or watch TV or visit an art gallery or spend an evening in a pub we are consuming. There is not ‘a world of consumption’ that some of us do not enter. We are all consumers and consumption must be regarded as an important sociological concept as a result. Consumption is also connected to notions of ‘agency’ - what people do rather than what is done to them or made available to them for their doings. Before the critical focus on consumption it was assumed that the meaning and use of things was dictated by how they were produced or by their simple mute materiality. Focusing on consumption challenges this way of thinking: rather than the mute and predictable end point of production it is rethought as an activity a process something we do that involves use and meaning. It is how most of us intervene in culture.</p><p>This thought-provoking yet accessible book offers a valuable introduction of the concept of consumption for researchers and undergraduate and postgraduate students in a range of fields within the humanities and social sciences including sociology history anthropology English media and cultural studies.</p>