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The politics of consumption : material culture and citizenship in Europe and America /

This volume explores the emergence of the rational consuming individual in modern economic thought; the moral and ideological values consumers have attached to their relationships with commodities; and the practices and theories of consumer citizenship within the state. Please note that images or di...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Daunton, M. J. (Martin J.), Hilton, Matthew
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Oxford : Berg, 2001.
Colección:Leisure, consumption, and culture.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Material politics : an introduction / Matthew Hilton and Martin Daunton / What is rum? The politics of consumption in the French Revolution / Rebecca L. Spang
  • Social opulence, private asceticism : ideas of consumption in early socialist thought / Noel Thompson
  • The material politics of natural monopoly : consuming gas in Victorian Britain / Martin Daunton
  • Scotch drapers and the politics of modernity : gender, class and national identity in the Victorian tally trade / Margot C. Finn
  • Citizenship law, state form and everyday aesthetics in modern France and Germany, 1920-1940 / Leora Auslander / Bread, milk and democracy : consumption and citizenship in twentieth-century Britain / Frank Trentmann
  • Enticement and deprivation : the regulation of consumption in pre-war Nazi Germany / Hartmut Berghoff
  • Negotiating consumption in a dictatorship : consumer politics in the GDR in the 1950s and 1960s / Philipp Heldmann
  • Citizens and consumers in the United States in the century of mass consumption / Lizabeth Cohen
  • The politics of plenty : consumerism in the twentieth-century United States / Meg Jacobs
  • Consumer politics in post-war Britain / Matthew Hilton
  • Strategies of consumer-group mobilization : France and Germany in the 1970s / Gunnar Trumbull
  • Corralling consumer culture : shifting rationales for American state intervention in free markets / Gary Cross.