Getting and Spending
Herausgeber: Strasser, Susan; McGovern, Charles; Judt, Matthias
Getting and Spending
Herausgeber: Strasser, Susan; McGovern, Charles; Judt, Matthias
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- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
The essays in this collection use the history of consumption to look at many aspects of social and political life.
The essays in this collection use the history of consumption to look at many aspects of social and political life.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 492
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Dezember 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 792g
- ISBN-13: 9780521626941
- ISBN-10: 0521626943
- Artikelnr.: 22223595
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 492
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Dezember 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 792g
- ISBN-13: 9780521626941
- ISBN-10: 0521626943
- Artikelnr.: 22223595
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Preface; Introduction; Part I. Politics, Markets, and the State: 1. The
consumers' White Label campaign of the National Consumers' League,
1898-1918; 2. Democracy and political identity in the consumer society; 3.
Changing consumption Regimes in Europe, 1930-1970; 4. Consumer research as
public relations: General Motors in the 1930s; 5. The New Deal State and
the making of citizen consumers; 6. Consumer spending as state Project:
yesterday's solutions and today's problems; 7. The Emigré as celebrant of
American consumer culture: George Katona and Ernest Dichter; 8. Dissolution
of the 'dictatorship over needs'? consumer behavior and economic reform in
East Germany in the 1960s; Part II. Everyday Life: 9. World War I and the
creation of desire for cars in Germany; 10. Gender, generation, and
consumption in the United States: working-class families in the interwar
period; 11. Comparing apples and oranges: housewives and the politics of
consumption in interwar Germany; 12. 'The convenience is out of this
world': the garbage disposer and American consumer culture; 13. Consumer
culture in the GDR, or how the struggle for antimodernity was lost on the
battleground of consumer culture; 14. Changes in consumption as social
practice in West Germany during the 1950s; 15. Reshaping shopping
environments: the competition between the city of Boston and its suburbs;
16. Toys, socialization, and the commodification of play; 17. The 'syndrome
of the 1950s' in Switzerland: cheap energy, mass consumption, and the
environment; 18. Reflecting on Ethnic Imagery in the Landscape of commerce,
1945-1975; Part III. History and Theory: 19. Modern subjectivity and
consumer culture; 20. Consumption and consumer society: a contribution to
the history of ideas; 21. Reconsidering abundance: a plea for ambiguity.
consumers' White Label campaign of the National Consumers' League,
1898-1918; 2. Democracy and political identity in the consumer society; 3.
Changing consumption Regimes in Europe, 1930-1970; 4. Consumer research as
public relations: General Motors in the 1930s; 5. The New Deal State and
the making of citizen consumers; 6. Consumer spending as state Project:
yesterday's solutions and today's problems; 7. The Emigré as celebrant of
American consumer culture: George Katona and Ernest Dichter; 8. Dissolution
of the 'dictatorship over needs'? consumer behavior and economic reform in
East Germany in the 1960s; Part II. Everyday Life: 9. World War I and the
creation of desire for cars in Germany; 10. Gender, generation, and
consumption in the United States: working-class families in the interwar
period; 11. Comparing apples and oranges: housewives and the politics of
consumption in interwar Germany; 12. 'The convenience is out of this
world': the garbage disposer and American consumer culture; 13. Consumer
culture in the GDR, or how the struggle for antimodernity was lost on the
battleground of consumer culture; 14. Changes in consumption as social
practice in West Germany during the 1950s; 15. Reshaping shopping
environments: the competition between the city of Boston and its suburbs;
16. Toys, socialization, and the commodification of play; 17. The 'syndrome
of the 1950s' in Switzerland: cheap energy, mass consumption, and the
environment; 18. Reflecting on Ethnic Imagery in the Landscape of commerce,
1945-1975; Part III. History and Theory: 19. Modern subjectivity and
consumer culture; 20. Consumption and consumer society: a contribution to
the history of ideas; 21. Reconsidering abundance: a plea for ambiguity.
Preface; Introduction; Part I. Politics, Markets, and the State: 1. The
consumers' White Label campaign of the National Consumers' League,
1898-1918; 2. Democracy and political identity in the consumer society; 3.
Changing consumption Regimes in Europe, 1930-1970; 4. Consumer research as
public relations: General Motors in the 1930s; 5. The New Deal State and
the making of citizen consumers; 6. Consumer spending as state Project:
yesterday's solutions and today's problems; 7. The Emigré as celebrant of
American consumer culture: George Katona and Ernest Dichter; 8. Dissolution
of the 'dictatorship over needs'? consumer behavior and economic reform in
East Germany in the 1960s; Part II. Everyday Life: 9. World War I and the
creation of desire for cars in Germany; 10. Gender, generation, and
consumption in the United States: working-class families in the interwar
period; 11. Comparing apples and oranges: housewives and the politics of
consumption in interwar Germany; 12. 'The convenience is out of this
world': the garbage disposer and American consumer culture; 13. Consumer
culture in the GDR, or how the struggle for antimodernity was lost on the
battleground of consumer culture; 14. Changes in consumption as social
practice in West Germany during the 1950s; 15. Reshaping shopping
environments: the competition between the city of Boston and its suburbs;
16. Toys, socialization, and the commodification of play; 17. The 'syndrome
of the 1950s' in Switzerland: cheap energy, mass consumption, and the
environment; 18. Reflecting on Ethnic Imagery in the Landscape of commerce,
1945-1975; Part III. History and Theory: 19. Modern subjectivity and
consumer culture; 20. Consumption and consumer society: a contribution to
the history of ideas; 21. Reconsidering abundance: a plea for ambiguity.
consumers' White Label campaign of the National Consumers' League,
1898-1918; 2. Democracy and political identity in the consumer society; 3.
Changing consumption Regimes in Europe, 1930-1970; 4. Consumer research as
public relations: General Motors in the 1930s; 5. The New Deal State and
the making of citizen consumers; 6. Consumer spending as state Project:
yesterday's solutions and today's problems; 7. The Emigré as celebrant of
American consumer culture: George Katona and Ernest Dichter; 8. Dissolution
of the 'dictatorship over needs'? consumer behavior and economic reform in
East Germany in the 1960s; Part II. Everyday Life: 9. World War I and the
creation of desire for cars in Germany; 10. Gender, generation, and
consumption in the United States: working-class families in the interwar
period; 11. Comparing apples and oranges: housewives and the politics of
consumption in interwar Germany; 12. 'The convenience is out of this
world': the garbage disposer and American consumer culture; 13. Consumer
culture in the GDR, or how the struggle for antimodernity was lost on the
battleground of consumer culture; 14. Changes in consumption as social
practice in West Germany during the 1950s; 15. Reshaping shopping
environments: the competition between the city of Boston and its suburbs;
16. Toys, socialization, and the commodification of play; 17. The 'syndrome
of the 1950s' in Switzerland: cheap energy, mass consumption, and the
environment; 18. Reflecting on Ethnic Imagery in the Landscape of commerce,
1945-1975; Part III. History and Theory: 19. Modern subjectivity and
consumer culture; 20. Consumption and consumer society: a contribution to
the history of ideas; 21. Reconsidering abundance: a plea for ambiguity.