Daniel Miller
简介
Drawing on a range of examples from Western and developing cultures, this book offers a re-reading of the contemporary society as the product of both individual and collective identity and behaviour. Marxist interpretations of the expansion in the range and number of material goods have tended to view people as estranged from the objects they produce, while massive consumption reinforces the fragmented and individualistic nature of capitalism. In this book, the author develops a more positive theory of material culture, revealing the creative potential in the relationship between people and goods. He argues that rather than being oppressed by them, people redefine material objects to make them express themselves and their cultures. He shows that everyday objects reflect not only personal tastes and attributes, but also moral principles and social ideals.
目录
Preface
Part I Objectification
1 Introduction
2 Hegel and Objectification
3 Marx: Objectification as Rupture
4 Munn: Objectification as Culture
5 Simmel: Objectification as Modernity
Part II Material Culture
6 The Humility of Objects
7 Artefacts in their Contexts
Part III Mass Consumption
8 The Study of Consumption
9 Object Domains, Ideology and Interests
10 Towards a Theory of Consumption
References
Index