Consuming Behaviours (eBook, PDF)
Identity, Politics and Pleasure in Twentieth-Century Britain
Redaktion: Rappaport, Erika; Crowley, Mark J.; Trudgen Dawson, Sandra
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Consuming Behaviours (eBook, PDF)
Identity, Politics and Pleasure in Twentieth-Century Britain
Redaktion: Rappaport, Erika; Crowley, Mark J.; Trudgen Dawson, Sandra
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In twentieth-century Britain, consumerism increasingly defined and redefined individual and social identities. New types of consumers emerged: the idealized working-class consumer, the African consumer and the teenager challenged the prominent position of the middle and upper-class female shopper.
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In twentieth-century Britain, consumerism increasingly defined and redefined individual and social identities. New types of consumers emerged: the idealized working-class consumer, the African consumer and the teenager challenged the prominent position of the middle and upper-class female shopper.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Mai 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000183078
- Artikelnr.: 59536137
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Mai 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000183078
- Artikelnr.: 59536137
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Erika Rappaport is an Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara, USA. Sandra Trudgen Dawson is an Instructor of History and Women's Studies at Northern Illinois University,USA. Mark J. Crowley is an Associate Professor in the School of History, Wuhan University, China.
1. Introduction: Consuming Behaviours: Identity
Politics and Pleasure in Twentieth-Century BritainErika D. Rappaport
University of California
Santa Barbara
USA; Sandra Trudgen Dawson
Northern Illinois University
USA; Mark J. Crowley
Wuhan University
ChinaPart I: Gender
Sexuality and Youth: Cultivating and Managing New Consumers2. Who is the Queer Consumer? Historical Perspectives on Capitalism and HomosexualityJustin Bengry
Birkbeck
University of London
UK3. 'Healthier and Better Clothes for Men': Men's Dress Reform in Interwar BritainIna Zweiniger-Bargielowska
University of Illinois
USA4. Selling
Consuming and Becoming the Beautiful Man in Britain: The 1930s and 1940s Paul Deslandes
University of Vermont
USA5. Rational Recreation in the Age of Affluence: The Café and Working-Class Youth in London
c.1939-1965 Kate Bradley
University of Kent
UK6. Teenagers
Photography and Self-fashioning: 1956-1965Penny Tinkler
University of Manchester
UK7. Unwanted Consumers: Violence and Consumption in British Football in the 1970s Brett Bebber
Old Dominion University
USAPart II: In and Beyond the Nation: The Local and the Global in the Production of Consumer Cultures8. Consumer Communication as Commodity: British Advertising Agencies and the Global Market for Advertising 1780-1980Stefan Schwarzkopf
Copenhagen Business School
Denmark9. Drink Empire Tea: Conservative Politics and Imperial Consumerism in Interwar BritainErika D. Rappaport
University of California
Santa Barbara
USA10. Female Credit Customers
the United Africa Company
and Consumer Markets in Postwar Ghana
Bianca Murillo
Willamette University
USA11. Designing Consumer Society: Citizens and Housing Plans during the Second World War
Sandra Trudgen Dawson
Northern Illinois University
USA12. Saving for the Nation: The Post Office and National Consumerism: c.1860-1945Mark J. Crowley
Wuhan University
China13. Prosperity for All? Britain and Mass Consumption in Western Europe after the Second World WarKenneth Mouré
University of Alberta
Canada14. A House Divided: The Organized Consumer and the British Labour Party
1945-60 Peter Gurney
University of Essex
UK15. Early British Television: The Allure and Threat of AmericaKelly Boyd
Institute of Historical Research
University of London
UKBibliographyIndex
Politics and Pleasure in Twentieth-Century BritainErika D. Rappaport
University of California
Santa Barbara
USA; Sandra Trudgen Dawson
Northern Illinois University
USA; Mark J. Crowley
Wuhan University
ChinaPart I: Gender
Sexuality and Youth: Cultivating and Managing New Consumers2. Who is the Queer Consumer? Historical Perspectives on Capitalism and HomosexualityJustin Bengry
Birkbeck
University of London
UK3. 'Healthier and Better Clothes for Men': Men's Dress Reform in Interwar BritainIna Zweiniger-Bargielowska
University of Illinois
USA4. Selling
Consuming and Becoming the Beautiful Man in Britain: The 1930s and 1940s Paul Deslandes
University of Vermont
USA5. Rational Recreation in the Age of Affluence: The Café and Working-Class Youth in London
c.1939-1965 Kate Bradley
University of Kent
UK6. Teenagers
Photography and Self-fashioning: 1956-1965Penny Tinkler
University of Manchester
UK7. Unwanted Consumers: Violence and Consumption in British Football in the 1970s Brett Bebber
Old Dominion University
USAPart II: In and Beyond the Nation: The Local and the Global in the Production of Consumer Cultures8. Consumer Communication as Commodity: British Advertising Agencies and the Global Market for Advertising 1780-1980Stefan Schwarzkopf
Copenhagen Business School
Denmark9. Drink Empire Tea: Conservative Politics and Imperial Consumerism in Interwar BritainErika D. Rappaport
University of California
Santa Barbara
USA10. Female Credit Customers
the United Africa Company
and Consumer Markets in Postwar Ghana
Bianca Murillo
Willamette University
USA11. Designing Consumer Society: Citizens and Housing Plans during the Second World War
Sandra Trudgen Dawson
Northern Illinois University
USA12. Saving for the Nation: The Post Office and National Consumerism: c.1860-1945Mark J. Crowley
Wuhan University
China13. Prosperity for All? Britain and Mass Consumption in Western Europe after the Second World WarKenneth Mouré
University of Alberta
Canada14. A House Divided: The Organized Consumer and the British Labour Party
1945-60 Peter Gurney
University of Essex
UK15. Early British Television: The Allure and Threat of AmericaKelly Boyd
Institute of Historical Research
University of London
UKBibliographyIndex
1. Introduction: Consuming Behaviours: Identity
Politics and Pleasure in Twentieth-Century BritainErika D. Rappaport
University of California
Santa Barbara
USA; Sandra Trudgen Dawson
Northern Illinois University
USA; Mark J. Crowley
Wuhan University
ChinaPart I: Gender
Sexuality and Youth: Cultivating and Managing New Consumers2. Who is the Queer Consumer? Historical Perspectives on Capitalism and HomosexualityJustin Bengry
Birkbeck
University of London
UK3. 'Healthier and Better Clothes for Men': Men's Dress Reform in Interwar BritainIna Zweiniger-Bargielowska
University of Illinois
USA4. Selling
Consuming and Becoming the Beautiful Man in Britain: The 1930s and 1940s Paul Deslandes
University of Vermont
USA5. Rational Recreation in the Age of Affluence: The Café and Working-Class Youth in London
c.1939-1965 Kate Bradley
University of Kent
UK6. Teenagers
Photography and Self-fashioning: 1956-1965Penny Tinkler
University of Manchester
UK7. Unwanted Consumers: Violence and Consumption in British Football in the 1970s Brett Bebber
Old Dominion University
USAPart II: In and Beyond the Nation: The Local and the Global in the Production of Consumer Cultures8. Consumer Communication as Commodity: British Advertising Agencies and the Global Market for Advertising 1780-1980Stefan Schwarzkopf
Copenhagen Business School
Denmark9. Drink Empire Tea: Conservative Politics and Imperial Consumerism in Interwar BritainErika D. Rappaport
University of California
Santa Barbara
USA10. Female Credit Customers
the United Africa Company
and Consumer Markets in Postwar Ghana
Bianca Murillo
Willamette University
USA11. Designing Consumer Society: Citizens and Housing Plans during the Second World War
Sandra Trudgen Dawson
Northern Illinois University
USA12. Saving for the Nation: The Post Office and National Consumerism: c.1860-1945Mark J. Crowley
Wuhan University
China13. Prosperity for All? Britain and Mass Consumption in Western Europe after the Second World WarKenneth Mouré
University of Alberta
Canada14. A House Divided: The Organized Consumer and the British Labour Party
1945-60 Peter Gurney
University of Essex
UK15. Early British Television: The Allure and Threat of AmericaKelly Boyd
Institute of Historical Research
University of London
UKBibliographyIndex
Politics and Pleasure in Twentieth-Century BritainErika D. Rappaport
University of California
Santa Barbara
USA; Sandra Trudgen Dawson
Northern Illinois University
USA; Mark J. Crowley
Wuhan University
ChinaPart I: Gender
Sexuality and Youth: Cultivating and Managing New Consumers2. Who is the Queer Consumer? Historical Perspectives on Capitalism and HomosexualityJustin Bengry
Birkbeck
University of London
UK3. 'Healthier and Better Clothes for Men': Men's Dress Reform in Interwar BritainIna Zweiniger-Bargielowska
University of Illinois
USA4. Selling
Consuming and Becoming the Beautiful Man in Britain: The 1930s and 1940s Paul Deslandes
University of Vermont
USA5. Rational Recreation in the Age of Affluence: The Café and Working-Class Youth in London
c.1939-1965 Kate Bradley
University of Kent
UK6. Teenagers
Photography and Self-fashioning: 1956-1965Penny Tinkler
University of Manchester
UK7. Unwanted Consumers: Violence and Consumption in British Football in the 1970s Brett Bebber
Old Dominion University
USAPart II: In and Beyond the Nation: The Local and the Global in the Production of Consumer Cultures8. Consumer Communication as Commodity: British Advertising Agencies and the Global Market for Advertising 1780-1980Stefan Schwarzkopf
Copenhagen Business School
Denmark9. Drink Empire Tea: Conservative Politics and Imperial Consumerism in Interwar BritainErika D. Rappaport
University of California
Santa Barbara
USA10. Female Credit Customers
the United Africa Company
and Consumer Markets in Postwar Ghana
Bianca Murillo
Willamette University
USA11. Designing Consumer Society: Citizens and Housing Plans during the Second World War
Sandra Trudgen Dawson
Northern Illinois University
USA12. Saving for the Nation: The Post Office and National Consumerism: c.1860-1945Mark J. Crowley
Wuhan University
China13. Prosperity for All? Britain and Mass Consumption in Western Europe after the Second World WarKenneth Mouré
University of Alberta
Canada14. A House Divided: The Organized Consumer and the British Labour Party
1945-60 Peter Gurney
University of Essex
UK15. Early British Television: The Allure and Threat of AmericaKelly Boyd
Institute of Historical Research
University of London
UKBibliographyIndex