Martin Daunton, Matthew Hilton - The Politics of Consumption; Material Culture and Citizenship in Europe and America (2001).pdf

(1330 KB) Pobierz
534 prelims.p65
The Politics of Consumption
721808976.018.png 721808976.019.png 721808976.020.png 721808976.021.png
Leisure, Consumption and Culture
General Editor: Rudy Koshar, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Leisure regimes in Europe (and North America) in the last two centuries have
brought about far-reaching changes in consumption patterns and consumer
cultures. The past twenty years have seen the evolution of scholarship on
consumption from a wide range of disciplines but historical research on the
subject is unevenly developed for late modern Europe, just as the historiography
of leisure practices is limited to certain periods and places. This series
encourages scholarship on how leisure and consumer culture evolved with
respect to an array of identities. It relates leisure and consumption to the
symbolic systems with which tourists, shoppers, fans, spectators, and hobbyists
have created meaning, and to the structures of power that have shaped such
consumer behaviour. It treats consumption in general and leisure practices in
particular as complex processes involving knowledge, negotiation, and the
active formation of individual and collective selves.
Editorial Board
Leora Auslander, University of Chicago, USA
John Brewer, University of Chicago, USA
Alon Confino, University of Virginia, USA
Martin Daunton, University of Cambridge, UK
Stephen Gundle, University of London, UK
Heinz-Gerhard Haupt, University of Bielefeld, Germany
Michael Kater, York University, Canada
John Pemble, University of Bristol, UK
Daniel Roche, CNRS, France
Adelheid von Saldern, University of Hannover, Germany
Dominique Veillon, IHTP-CNRS, France
Titles previously published in this Series:
German Travel Cultures
Rudy Koshar
Commercial Cultures
Edited by Peter Jackson, Michelle Lowe, Daniel Miller and Frank Mort
721808976.001.png 721808976.002.png 721808976.003.png 721808976.004.png
The Politics of Consumption
Material Culture and Citizenship in Europe and America
Edited by
Martin Daunton and Matthew Hilton
Oxford • New York
721808976.005.png 721808976.006.png 721808976.007.png 721808976.008.png 721808976.009.png
First published in 2001 by
Berg
Editorial offices:
150 Cowley Road, Oxford, OX4 1JJ, UK
838 Broadway, Third Floor, New York, NY 10003-4812, USA
© Martin Daunton and Matthew Hilton 2001
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form
or by any means without the written permission of Berg.
Berg is an imprint of Oxford International Publishers Ltd.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN 1 85973 466 9 (Cloth)
1 85973 471 5 (Paper)
Typeset by JS Typesetting, Wellingborough, Northamptonshire
Printed in the United Kingdom by Biddles Ltd, Guildford and King’s Lynn
721808976.010.png 721808976.011.png 721808976.012.png 721808976.013.png
Contents
Acknowledgements
vii
Notes on Contributors
ix
1
Material Politics: An Introduction
Matthew Hilton and Martin Daunton
1
2
What is Rum? The Politics of Consumption in the
French Revolution
Rebecca L. Spang
33
3
Social Opulence, Private Asceticism: Ideas of Consumption in
Early Socialist Thought
Noel Thompson
51
4
The Material Politics of Natural Monopoly: Consuming Gas
in Victorian Britain
Martin Daunton
69
5
Scotch Drapers and the Politics of Modernity: Gender,
Class and National Identity in the Victorian Tally Trade
Margot C. Finn
89
6
Citizenship Law, State Form and Everyday Aesthetics in
Modern France and Germany, 1920–1940
Leora Auslander
109
7
Bread, Milk and Democracy: Consumption and Citizenship in
Twentieth-Century Britain
Frank Trentmann
129
8
Enticement and Deprivation: The Regulation of Consumption
in Pre-war Nazi Germany
Hartmut Berghoff
165
v
721808976.014.png 721808976.015.png 721808976.016.png 721808976.017.png
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin