The Oxford Handbook of the History of Consumption
Herausgeber: Trentmann, Frank
The Oxford Handbook of the History of Consumption
Herausgeber: Trentmann, Frank
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The Oxford Handbook of the History of Consumption offers a timely overview of how our understanding of consumption in history has changed in the last generation.
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The Oxford Handbook of the History of Consumption offers a timely overview of how our understanding of consumption in history has changed in the last generation.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press(UK)
- Seitenzahl: 714
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 39mm
- Gewicht: 1210g
- ISBN-13: 9780199689460
- ISBN-10: 0199689466
- Artikelnr.: 39338276
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Oxford University Press(UK)
- Seitenzahl: 714
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 39mm
- Gewicht: 1210g
- ISBN-13: 9780199689460
- ISBN-10: 0199689466
- Artikelnr.: 39338276
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Frank Trentmann is Professor of History at Birkbeck College, University of London, and Professor of History and Social Sciences at the Sustainable Consumption Institute, University of Manchester.
* Introduction
* Part I: Traditions
* 1: James Davidson: Citizen Consumers: The Athenian Democracy and the
Origins of Western Consumption
* 2: Craig Clunas: Things in Between: Splendour and Excess in Ming
China
* 3: Sara Pennell: Material Culture in Seventeenth-century 'Britain':
the Matter of Domestic Consumption
* 4: Jeremy Prestholdt: Africa and the Global Lives of Things
* Part II: Dynamics and Diffusion
* 5: Michelle Craig McDonald: Transatlantic Consumption
* 6: Felipe Fernández-Armesto with the assistance of Benjamin Sacks:
The Global Exchange of Food and Drugs
* 7: Prasannan Parthasarathi and Giorgio Riello: From India to the
World: Cotton and Fashionability
* Part III: Rich and Poor
* 8: Maxine Berg: Luxury, the Luxury Trades, and the Roots of
Industrial Growth: A Global Perspective
* 9: Dominique Margairaz: City and Country: Home, Possessions, and
Diet, Western Europe 1600-1800
* 10: Carole Shammas: Standard of Living, Consumption, and Political
Economy over the Past 500 Years
* Part IV: Places of Consumption
* 11: Evelyn Welch: Sites of Consumption in Early Modern Europe
* 12: Brian Cowan: Public Spaces, Knowledge, and Sociability
* 13: Heinz-Gerhard Haupt: Small Shops and Department Stores
* Part V: Technologies and Practices
* 14: Elizabeth Shove: Comfort and Convenience: Temporality and
Practice
* 15: David E. Nye: Consumption of Energy
* 16: Joshua Goldstein: Waste
* 17: Lendol Calder: Saving and Spending
* 18: Alan Warde: Eating
* Part VI: State and Civil Society
* 19: Lawrence B. Glickman: Consumer Activism, Consumer Regimes, and
the Consumer Movement: Rethinking the History of Consumer Politics in
the United States
* 20: Karl Gerth: Consumption and Nationalism: China
* 21: S. Jonathan Wiesen: National Socialism and Consumption
* 22: Sheila Fitzpatrick: Things under Socialism: the Soviet Experience
* 23: Timothy Burke: Unexpected Subversions: Modern Colonialism,
Globalization, and Commodity Culture
* 24: Andrew Gordon: Consumption, Consumerism, and Japanese Modernity
* 25: Matthew Hilton: Consumer movements
* 26: Frank Trentmann: The Politics of Everyday Life
* Part VII: Identities
* 27: Mike Savage: Status, Lifestyle, and Taste
* 28: Enrica Asquer: Domesticity and Beyond: Gender, Family, and
Consumption in Modern Europe
* 29: Daniel Thomas Cook: Children's Consumption in History
* 30: Paolo Capuzzo: Youth and consumption
* 31: Christopher Breward: Fashion
* 32: Roberta Sassatelli: Self and Body
* 33: Avner Offer: Consumption and Well-Being
* Part I: Traditions
* 1: James Davidson: Citizen Consumers: The Athenian Democracy and the
Origins of Western Consumption
* 2: Craig Clunas: Things in Between: Splendour and Excess in Ming
China
* 3: Sara Pennell: Material Culture in Seventeenth-century 'Britain':
the Matter of Domestic Consumption
* 4: Jeremy Prestholdt: Africa and the Global Lives of Things
* Part II: Dynamics and Diffusion
* 5: Michelle Craig McDonald: Transatlantic Consumption
* 6: Felipe Fernández-Armesto with the assistance of Benjamin Sacks:
The Global Exchange of Food and Drugs
* 7: Prasannan Parthasarathi and Giorgio Riello: From India to the
World: Cotton and Fashionability
* Part III: Rich and Poor
* 8: Maxine Berg: Luxury, the Luxury Trades, and the Roots of
Industrial Growth: A Global Perspective
* 9: Dominique Margairaz: City and Country: Home, Possessions, and
Diet, Western Europe 1600-1800
* 10: Carole Shammas: Standard of Living, Consumption, and Political
Economy over the Past 500 Years
* Part IV: Places of Consumption
* 11: Evelyn Welch: Sites of Consumption in Early Modern Europe
* 12: Brian Cowan: Public Spaces, Knowledge, and Sociability
* 13: Heinz-Gerhard Haupt: Small Shops and Department Stores
* Part V: Technologies and Practices
* 14: Elizabeth Shove: Comfort and Convenience: Temporality and
Practice
* 15: David E. Nye: Consumption of Energy
* 16: Joshua Goldstein: Waste
* 17: Lendol Calder: Saving and Spending
* 18: Alan Warde: Eating
* Part VI: State and Civil Society
* 19: Lawrence B. Glickman: Consumer Activism, Consumer Regimes, and
the Consumer Movement: Rethinking the History of Consumer Politics in
the United States
* 20: Karl Gerth: Consumption and Nationalism: China
* 21: S. Jonathan Wiesen: National Socialism and Consumption
* 22: Sheila Fitzpatrick: Things under Socialism: the Soviet Experience
* 23: Timothy Burke: Unexpected Subversions: Modern Colonialism,
Globalization, and Commodity Culture
* 24: Andrew Gordon: Consumption, Consumerism, and Japanese Modernity
* 25: Matthew Hilton: Consumer movements
* 26: Frank Trentmann: The Politics of Everyday Life
* Part VII: Identities
* 27: Mike Savage: Status, Lifestyle, and Taste
* 28: Enrica Asquer: Domesticity and Beyond: Gender, Family, and
Consumption in Modern Europe
* 29: Daniel Thomas Cook: Children's Consumption in History
* 30: Paolo Capuzzo: Youth and consumption
* 31: Christopher Breward: Fashion
* 32: Roberta Sassatelli: Self and Body
* 33: Avner Offer: Consumption and Well-Being
* Introduction
* Part I: Traditions
* 1: James Davidson: Citizen Consumers: The Athenian Democracy and the
Origins of Western Consumption
* 2: Craig Clunas: Things in Between: Splendour and Excess in Ming
China
* 3: Sara Pennell: Material Culture in Seventeenth-century 'Britain':
the Matter of Domestic Consumption
* 4: Jeremy Prestholdt: Africa and the Global Lives of Things
* Part II: Dynamics and Diffusion
* 5: Michelle Craig McDonald: Transatlantic Consumption
* 6: Felipe Fernández-Armesto with the assistance of Benjamin Sacks:
The Global Exchange of Food and Drugs
* 7: Prasannan Parthasarathi and Giorgio Riello: From India to the
World: Cotton and Fashionability
* Part III: Rich and Poor
* 8: Maxine Berg: Luxury, the Luxury Trades, and the Roots of
Industrial Growth: A Global Perspective
* 9: Dominique Margairaz: City and Country: Home, Possessions, and
Diet, Western Europe 1600-1800
* 10: Carole Shammas: Standard of Living, Consumption, and Political
Economy over the Past 500 Years
* Part IV: Places of Consumption
* 11: Evelyn Welch: Sites of Consumption in Early Modern Europe
* 12: Brian Cowan: Public Spaces, Knowledge, and Sociability
* 13: Heinz-Gerhard Haupt: Small Shops and Department Stores
* Part V: Technologies and Practices
* 14: Elizabeth Shove: Comfort and Convenience: Temporality and
Practice
* 15: David E. Nye: Consumption of Energy
* 16: Joshua Goldstein: Waste
* 17: Lendol Calder: Saving and Spending
* 18: Alan Warde: Eating
* Part VI: State and Civil Society
* 19: Lawrence B. Glickman: Consumer Activism, Consumer Regimes, and
the Consumer Movement: Rethinking the History of Consumer Politics in
the United States
* 20: Karl Gerth: Consumption and Nationalism: China
* 21: S. Jonathan Wiesen: National Socialism and Consumption
* 22: Sheila Fitzpatrick: Things under Socialism: the Soviet Experience
* 23: Timothy Burke: Unexpected Subversions: Modern Colonialism,
Globalization, and Commodity Culture
* 24: Andrew Gordon: Consumption, Consumerism, and Japanese Modernity
* 25: Matthew Hilton: Consumer movements
* 26: Frank Trentmann: The Politics of Everyday Life
* Part VII: Identities
* 27: Mike Savage: Status, Lifestyle, and Taste
* 28: Enrica Asquer: Domesticity and Beyond: Gender, Family, and
Consumption in Modern Europe
* 29: Daniel Thomas Cook: Children's Consumption in History
* 30: Paolo Capuzzo: Youth and consumption
* 31: Christopher Breward: Fashion
* 32: Roberta Sassatelli: Self and Body
* 33: Avner Offer: Consumption and Well-Being
* Part I: Traditions
* 1: James Davidson: Citizen Consumers: The Athenian Democracy and the
Origins of Western Consumption
* 2: Craig Clunas: Things in Between: Splendour and Excess in Ming
China
* 3: Sara Pennell: Material Culture in Seventeenth-century 'Britain':
the Matter of Domestic Consumption
* 4: Jeremy Prestholdt: Africa and the Global Lives of Things
* Part II: Dynamics and Diffusion
* 5: Michelle Craig McDonald: Transatlantic Consumption
* 6: Felipe Fernández-Armesto with the assistance of Benjamin Sacks:
The Global Exchange of Food and Drugs
* 7: Prasannan Parthasarathi and Giorgio Riello: From India to the
World: Cotton and Fashionability
* Part III: Rich and Poor
* 8: Maxine Berg: Luxury, the Luxury Trades, and the Roots of
Industrial Growth: A Global Perspective
* 9: Dominique Margairaz: City and Country: Home, Possessions, and
Diet, Western Europe 1600-1800
* 10: Carole Shammas: Standard of Living, Consumption, and Political
Economy over the Past 500 Years
* Part IV: Places of Consumption
* 11: Evelyn Welch: Sites of Consumption in Early Modern Europe
* 12: Brian Cowan: Public Spaces, Knowledge, and Sociability
* 13: Heinz-Gerhard Haupt: Small Shops and Department Stores
* Part V: Technologies and Practices
* 14: Elizabeth Shove: Comfort and Convenience: Temporality and
Practice
* 15: David E. Nye: Consumption of Energy
* 16: Joshua Goldstein: Waste
* 17: Lendol Calder: Saving and Spending
* 18: Alan Warde: Eating
* Part VI: State and Civil Society
* 19: Lawrence B. Glickman: Consumer Activism, Consumer Regimes, and
the Consumer Movement: Rethinking the History of Consumer Politics in
the United States
* 20: Karl Gerth: Consumption and Nationalism: China
* 21: S. Jonathan Wiesen: National Socialism and Consumption
* 22: Sheila Fitzpatrick: Things under Socialism: the Soviet Experience
* 23: Timothy Burke: Unexpected Subversions: Modern Colonialism,
Globalization, and Commodity Culture
* 24: Andrew Gordon: Consumption, Consumerism, and Japanese Modernity
* 25: Matthew Hilton: Consumer movements
* 26: Frank Trentmann: The Politics of Everyday Life
* Part VII: Identities
* 27: Mike Savage: Status, Lifestyle, and Taste
* 28: Enrica Asquer: Domesticity and Beyond: Gender, Family, and
Consumption in Modern Europe
* 29: Daniel Thomas Cook: Children's Consumption in History
* 30: Paolo Capuzzo: Youth and consumption
* 31: Christopher Breward: Fashion
* 32: Roberta Sassatelli: Self and Body
* 33: Avner Offer: Consumption and Well-Being