Why are i-pods and mobile phones fashion accessories? Why do people spend thousands remodelling their perfectly functional kitchen? Why do people crave shoes or handbags? Is our desire for objects unhealthy, or irrational?

Objects have an inescapable hold over us, not just in consumer culture but increasingly in the disciplines that study social relations too. This book offers a systematic overview of the diverse ways of studying the material as culture. Surveying the field of material culture studies through an examination and synthesis of classical and contemporary scholarship on objects, commodities, consumption, and symbolization, this book: Introduces the key concepts and approaches in the study of objects and their meanings; Presents the full sweep of core theory – from Marxist and critical approaches to structuralism and semiotics – to evaluate the frameworks for approaching the material world; Shows how and why people use objects to perform identity, achieve social status, and narrativize life experiences; Analyzes everyday domains in which objects are important: social status, identity, social performance and narrativization; Shows why studying material culture is necessary for understanding the social.

This book will be essential reading for students and researchers in sociology, anthropology, cultural studies, consumer behaviour studies, design and fashion studies.

Conclusion: Objects and Meaning in Consumer Culture

Conclusion: Objects and Meaning in Consumer Culture

Conclusion: Objects and meaning in consumer culture

Writing on adornment, Georg Simmel (1950) gets at the crux of psycho-cultural processes related to people's use and display of a special class of objects. Objects of adornment, Simmel observes, are generally of considerable value, or at least made to appear as though they are; for example, a string of pearls, a diamond ring, a chunky gold wristwatch, a pretty pair of shoes, or a pair of flashy sunglasses. The dynamic at play in the act of adornment, Simmel finds, is the strangest of sociological processes. Simmel had an uncanny knack of observing and unearthing such kernels of sociological truth in the smallest and most trivial kinds of things. Admittedly, the dynamics ...

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