
Devising Consumption
Description
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While the analysis of consumption and markets has been carved up between academics and practitioners who have been interested in either their social and cultural life or their economic and commercial organisation, consumption continues to be driven by their combination. Devising consumption requires practical mixtures of commerce and art whether the product is an insurance policy or the next gadget in the internet of things . By making the case for a pragmatic understanding of how ordinary, everyday consumption is orchestrated, the book offers an alternative to orthodox approaches, which should appeal to interdisciplinary audiences interested in questions about how markets work and why it matters.
Reviews / Votes
"Truly ground breaking, both as a study of the operation of the 1911 National Insurance Act and in its use of insurance company and credit brokers' records. Original research that blazes a trail that nobody else working in the field of mass consumption and welfare will in the future be able to ignore." - John Pemble, Senior Research Fellow at Bristol University, UK and author of Venice Rediscovered and The Mediterranean Passion."That a cultural and sociological approach to economic topics can be extremely powerful was first demonstrated by Max Weber in The Protestant Ethic. Liz McFall's Devising Consumption is an extremely interesting and well executed study in the very same genre. Choosing two institutions that are little known she also does something that Weber would have applauded: she carefully documents and analyzes how the poor have spent their resources and how others have tried to profit from this. This book will interest anyone with a lively sense of how those with few material resources fare in the market system." - Professor Richard Swedberg, Cornell University, USA
"Liz McFall's timely book covers 150 years of 'doorstep finance' of the working-class British neighbourhoods. With a goal of 'ventriloquising the silent poor' (p. 171), McFall draws on archival documents, such as record books and advertisements, to show how markets for consumer finance were 'devised' by companies and the door-knocking agents who made their business possible. The book's introduction and five chapters cover what these products were, why they were in demand, how they were sold and marketed, and how the products evolved from the 1800s up until the 1970s."- Erin B. Taylor, European Association of Social Anthropologists
"An impressively engaging and well-crafted book that makes an important contribution not only in recovering a hidden history but also by providing a theoretical intervention that opens up a range of problem areas about how we connect markets and consumption."- Dr Don Slater, London School of Economics
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