Consumer Culture and PostmodernismSAGE, 11 ¡.¤. 2007 - 232 ˹éÒ 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:
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. |
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¼Å¡Òäé¹ËÒ 1 - 5 ¨Ò¡ 30
˹éÒ vii
... Aestheticization of Everyday Life 6 Lifestyle and Consumer Culture 7 City Cultures and Postmodern Lifestyles 8 Consumer Culture and Global Disorder 9 Common Culture or Uncommon Cultures? 10 The Globalization of Diversity 11 Modernity ...
... Aestheticization of Everyday Life 6 Lifestyle and Consumer Culture 7 City Cultures and Postmodern Lifestyles 8 Consumer Culture and Global Disorder 9 Common Culture or Uncommon Cultures? 10 The Globalization of Diversity 11 Modernity ...
˹éÒ xiii
... Aestheticization of Everyday Life' was first given at the Popular Culture Association Conference, New Orleans in April 1988. It was also given at the Conference on Modernity as History, Copenhagen in September 1988 and at a seminar at ...
... Aestheticization of Everyday Life' was first given at the Popular Culture Association Conference, New Orleans in April 1988. It was also given at the Conference on Modernity as History, Copenhagen in September 1988 and at a seminar at ...
˹éÒ 24
... everyday objects (the influence of surrealism on Benjamin's theoretical framework is evident here). This celebration of the aesthetic potential of mass culture and the aestheticized perceptions of the people who stroll through the urban ...
... everyday objects (the influence of surrealism on Benjamin's theoretical framework is evident here). This celebration of the aesthetic potential of mass culture and the aestheticized perceptions of the people who stroll through the urban ...
˹éÒ 31
... everyday life and hence gave primacy to aestheic experiences and gestures over morality and communicative modes of ... aestheticization of life, art as the good of life). This oversimplified narrative, then, may help us to point toward ...
... everyday life and hence gave primacy to aestheic experiences and gestures over morality and communicative modes of ... aestheticization of life, art as the good of life). This oversimplified narrative, then, may help us to point toward ...
˹éÒ 38
... Aestheticism. In this context it is interesting to dote that in the 1960s ... everyday life, to resist art becoming a museum commodity-object. Here we ... aesthetics to be characterized as an aesthetics of the body (Lash and Urry, 1987) ...
... Aestheticism. In this context it is interesting to dote that in the 1960s ... everyday life, to resist art becoming a museum commodity-object. Here we ... aesthetics to be characterized as an aesthetics of the body (Lash and Urry, 1987) ...
à¹×éÍËÒ
1 | |
13 | |
28 | |
4 Cultural Change and Social Practice | 50 |
5 The Aestheticization of Everyday Life | 64 |
6 Lifestyle and Consumer Culture | 81 |
7 City Cultures and Postmodern Lifestyles | 93 |
8 Consumer Culture and Global Disorder | 110 |
9 Common Culture or Uncommon Cultures? | 127 |
10 The Globalization of Diversity | 142 |
11 Modernity and the Cultural Question | 147 |
Bibliography | 182 |
Index | 198 |
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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 counterculture critical cultural capital cultural intermediaries cultural sphere Culture & Society discussion economic 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 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 Weber Western
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˹éÒ 83 - Rather than unreflexively adopting a lifestyle, through tradition or habit, the new heroes of consumer culture make lifestyle a life project and display their individuality and sense of style in the particularity of the assemblage of goods, clothes, practices, experiences, appearance and bodily dispositions they design together into a lifestyle.
˹éÒ 67 - And so art is everywhere, since artifice is at the very heart of reality . And so art is dead, not only because its critical transcendence is gone, but because reality itself, entirely impregnated by an aesthetic which is inseparable from its own structure, has been confused with its own image.
˹éÒ 7 - ... a prodigious expansion of culture throughout the social realm, to the point at which everything in our social life - from economic value and state power to practices and to the very structure of the psyche itself - can be said to have become 'cultural' in some original and as yet untheorized sense.
˹éÒ 18 - culture industry' is a targeted rather than an undifferentiated field, and lifestyle practices reflect the divisions of class and culture: . . . knowledge becomes important: knowledge of new goods, their social and cultural value, and how to use them appropriately. This is particularly the case with aspiring groups who adopt a learning mode towards consumption and the cultivation of a lifestyle. It is for groups such as the new middle class, the new working class and the new rich or upper class,...
˹éÒ 54 - This is perhaps the most distressing development of all from an academic standpoint, which has traditionally had a vested interest in preserving a realm of high or elite culture against the surrounding environment of philistinism, of schlock and kitsch, of TV series and...
˹éÒ 80 - ... we are moving towards a society without fixed status groups in which the adoption of styles of life (manifest in choice of clothes, leisure activities, consumer goods, bodily disposition) which are fixed to specific groups have been surpassed.
˹éÒ 63 - ... the effacement of the boundary between art and everyday life; the collapse of the hierarchical distinction between high and mass/popular culture; a stylistic promiscuity favouring eclecticism and the mixing of codes; parody, pastiche, irony, playfulness and the celebration of the surface "depthlessness...
˹éÒ 58 - ... the play of the real' and capacity to open up to surface sensations, spectacular imagery, liminoid experiences and intensities without the nostalgia for the real.
˹éÒ 67 - Today it is quotidian reality in its entirety - political, social, historical and economic - that from now on incorporates the simulatory dimension of hyperrealism. We live everywhere already in an "esthetic