
The Consumption of Mass
Wiley (Publisher)
Published on 14. September 2001
Book
Paperback/Softback
320 pages
978-0-631-22819-6 (ISBN)
Description
Arguing that mass is key to understanding the materialisation of social relations, this collection opens up contemporary thinking about identity, choice and values. With new contributions by Zygmunt Bauman, Robert Cooper and Dan Rose, these twelve innovative papers draw together debates on social theory, community, materiality and consumption.
Reviews / Votes
"Taken together, the chapters increase understandings about occurrences in which relations are embodied and mobilized, and explore the 'unconsumable' in terms of what/who is excluded." Socilogy: History and TheoryMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Hoboken
United Kingdom
Publishing group
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 228 mm
Width: 150 mm
Thickness: 14 mm
Weight
354 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-631-22819-6 (9780631228196)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Nick Lee is Lecturer in Sociology at Keele University. His research explores relations between dignity, presence and materiality. His main contribution so far has been to the sociology of childhood. His publications include 'Childhood and Society: Growing Up in an Age of Uncertainty', Open University Press, 2001.
Rolland Munro is Professor of Organisation Theory and Director of the Centre for Social Theory and Technology at Keele University. Among many articles on culture, identity, information, knowledge and power is a long standing interest in different forms of accountability and belonging. He is currently writing a book on the Euro-American's cultural and social entanglement with technology, provisionally called 'The Demanding Relationship' to clarify ideas like motility, disposal, discretion, punctualising and ethos. He co-edited a 1997 Sociological Review Monograph entitled 'Ideas of Difference: Social Spaces and the Labour of Division'.
Rolland Munro is Professor of Organisation Theory and Director of the Centre for Social Theory and Technology at Keele University. Among many articles on culture, identity, information, knowledge and power is a long standing interest in different forms of accountability and belonging. He is currently writing a book on the Euro-American's cultural and social entanglement with technology, provisionally called 'The Demanding Relationship' to clarify ideas like motility, disposal, discretion, punctualising and ethos. He co-edited a 1997 Sociological Review Monograph entitled 'Ideas of Difference: Social Spaces and the Labour of Division'.
Content
Part I - Imagining Mass. Chapter 1 - Individuality and Susceptibility: The Consumption of Agency in Social Structures, Barry Barnes, University of Exeter.
Chapter 2 - Pass the Salt: Materiality and the Production of Mass for Consumption, Dan Rose, University of Pennsylvania.
Chapter 3 - Consuming Mass: Mutability and Consumption, Robert Cooper, Keele University.
Part II - Community and Mass.
Chapter 4 - The Consumption of Masses: Calculating Community for Maximum Impact and Instant Obsolescence, Zygmunt Bauman, Leeds University (Emeritus).
Chapter 5 - Ordering Otherness: The Consumption and Disposal of Others, Christina Palli Monguilod, Aotonoma University.
Chapter 6 - The Waiting of Mass: Individuality and the Process of Double Forgetting, Rolland Munro, Keele University.
Part III - Writing and Mass.
Chapter 7 - All Consuming Passions: The Refiguiring of Subjectivity in later Twentieth Century Discourses of Consumption, Joanna Latimer, Keele University.
Chapter 8 - The Mystery of the Assumption: Women's Writing and Endless Consumption, Heather Hopfl, Bolton .
Chapter 9 - The Consumption of Mass: Interpreting Luck and the Mass Average, Jane Parish, Keel University.
Part IV - Performing Mass.
Chapter 10 - The Consumption of Vagrancy, Thomas Bay and Per Backius, University of Stockholm.
Chapter 11 - The Consumption of Bass: Techno's Funky Alien and the Contusion of Mass, Rob Beeston, Keele University.
Chapter 12 - Border Blues: Maastricht and Dada Disorder, Robert Grafton Small, Keel University
Chapter 2 - Pass the Salt: Materiality and the Production of Mass for Consumption, Dan Rose, University of Pennsylvania.
Chapter 3 - Consuming Mass: Mutability and Consumption, Robert Cooper, Keele University.
Part II - Community and Mass.
Chapter 4 - The Consumption of Masses: Calculating Community for Maximum Impact and Instant Obsolescence, Zygmunt Bauman, Leeds University (Emeritus).
Chapter 5 - Ordering Otherness: The Consumption and Disposal of Others, Christina Palli Monguilod, Aotonoma University.
Chapter 6 - The Waiting of Mass: Individuality and the Process of Double Forgetting, Rolland Munro, Keele University.
Part III - Writing and Mass.
Chapter 7 - All Consuming Passions: The Refiguiring of Subjectivity in later Twentieth Century Discourses of Consumption, Joanna Latimer, Keele University.
Chapter 8 - The Mystery of the Assumption: Women's Writing and Endless Consumption, Heather Hopfl, Bolton .
Chapter 9 - The Consumption of Mass: Interpreting Luck and the Mass Average, Jane Parish, Keel University.
Part IV - Performing Mass.
Chapter 10 - The Consumption of Vagrancy, Thomas Bay and Per Backius, University of Stockholm.
Chapter 11 - The Consumption of Bass: Techno's Funky Alien and the Contusion of Mass, Rob Beeston, Keele University.
Chapter 12 - Border Blues: Maastricht and Dada Disorder, Robert Grafton Small, Keel University