Class, Consumption and Quality of Life
Pergamon (Publisher)
Published on 31. January 1996
Book
Hardback
70 pages
978-0-08-042882-6 (ISBN)
Description
Traditionally quality of life opportunities in the city have been viewed in relation to class and production-based positions and in terms of access to collective consumption. Developing Saunders' arguments about the restructuring of British society in terms of private modes of consumption, this study assesses the significance of new spatial and social inequalities which arise from the restratification of society on the basis of consumption cleavages. It argues that there has been a failure within much recent research on the quality of life in the city to acknowledge the importance of the shifting attitudes among some population groups towards private modes of consumption. It examines the relations between experience of consumption and perceptions of what constitutes quality of life, by a national attitudinal survey. The results suggest that significant differences in consumption behaviour and attitudes exist and in part these account for the divergent patterns of quality of life, experiences by groups in British society and within different regions of Britain.
Traditionally quality of life opportunities in the city have been viewed in relation to class and production-based positions and in terms of access to collective consumption. Developing Saunders' arguments about the restructuring of British society in terms of private modes of consumption, this study assesses the significance of new spatial and social inequalities which arise from the restratification of society on the basis of consumption cleavages. It argues that there has been a failure within much recent research on the quality of life in the city to acknowledge the importance of the shifting attitudes among some population groups towards private modes of consumption. It examines the relations between experience of consumption and perceptions of what constitutes quality of life, by a national attitudinal survey. The results suggest that significant differences in consumption behaviour and attitudes exist and in part these account for the divergent patterns of quality of life, experiences by groups in British society and within different regions of Britain.
Traditionally quality of life opportunities in the city have been viewed in relation to class and production-based positions and in terms of access to collective consumption. Developing Saunders' arguments about the restructuring of British society in terms of private modes of consumption, this study assesses the significance of new spatial and social inequalities which arise from the restratification of society on the basis of consumption cleavages. It argues that there has been a failure within much recent research on the quality of life in the city to acknowledge the importance of the shifting attitudes among some population groups towards private modes of consumption. It examines the relations between experience of consumption and perceptions of what constitutes quality of life, by a national attitudinal survey. The results suggest that significant differences in consumption behaviour and attitudes exist and in part these account for the divergent patterns of quality of life, experiences by groups in British society and within different regions of Britain.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Amsterdam
Netherlands
Publishing group
Elsevier Science & Technology
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
bibliography
ISBN-13
978-0-08-042882-6 (9780080428826)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
Consumption, Class and Society. Consumption and production. Significance of consumption realignment. Shifts in modes of consumption. Attitudes to private consumption. Changes in modes of consumption: modes of provision and the individual. Consumption and Quality of Life. Quality of life research. Private consumption and quality of life. Service uptake as a factor influencing perception of the key dimensions of quality of life. Service uptake as a factor influencing the overall rating of an individual's quality of life. The influence of class, income, age and region on perceptions of quality of life. Perceptions of privatised consumer services in relation to respondents' evaluations of their quality of life experience. Shifting modes of consumption and changing places. Consumption, Quality of Life and the City. Reconstructing the city. Glasgow: reconstruction and consumption. Conclusion.