The rise of consumer capitalism in America, 1880-1930

Author(s)

    • Silla, Cesare

Bibliographic Information

The rise of consumer capitalism in America, 1880-1930

Cesare Silla

(Contemporary liminality, 6)

Routledge, 2018

  • : hbk

Other Title

Marketing e desiderio

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Translation of: Marketing e desiderio

Includes bibliographical references (p. [197]-221) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book offers a genealogical account of the rise of consumer capitalism, tracing its origins in America between 1880 and 1930 and explaining how it emerged to become the dominant form of social organization of our time. Asking how it was that we came to be consumers who live in societies that revolve around an ever-spinning circle of production and consumption, not only of goods, but also of events, experiences, emotions and relations, The Rise of Consumer Capitalism in America presents an extensive analysis of primary sources to demonstrate the conditions and forces from which consumer capitalism emerged and became victorious. Employing a Weberian approach that brings liminality to the fore as a master concept to make sense of historical change, the author links an in-depth empirical investigation to supple sociological theorizing to show how the encirclement of all aspects of life by the logic of consumer capitalism was a time-bound historical creation rather than a necessary one. A fascinating study of the appearance and triumph of the "ideology" of our age, this book will appeal to scholars of social and anthropological theory, historical sociology, cultural history and American studies.

Table of Contents

Lists of Tables and Figures Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction: Revisiting the Genealogy of Consumer Capitalism Through Liminality Part I: On the Threshold of a New Era: Making Way for Modernity 1. A New Economic Life 2. Souls in Transition Part II: Making the Consumer City: The Theatricalization Of Urban Life 3. The Chicago World's Fair Of 1893 And the Urban Ideal 4. The City as Spectacle 5. The Presentation of Self in Urban Daily Life Part III: The Genesis of The Consumer: 'Image-Making' And the Production of Desire 6. The Personality of Business 7. The New Basis of Civilization 8. Subjects of Desire Part IV: Marketing Professionalism: The Engine of Consumer Capitalism and Its Lasting Effect 9. Marketing Plan and Consumer Research 10. Relationship Marketing and The Experience Economy 11. Planned Obsolescence and The Consumption Engineer Concluding Remarks Bibliography Index

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