AnyBook4Less.com | Order from a Major Online Bookstore |
![]() |
Home |  Store List |  FAQ |  Contact Us |   | ||
Ultimate Book Price Comparison Engine Save Your Time And Money |
![]() |
Title: The World of Goods: Towards an Anthropology of Consumption by Mary Douglas, Baron Isherwood, Baron Asherwood ISBN: 0-415-13047-6 Publisher: Routledge Pub. Date: October, 1996 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $27.95 |
Average Customer Rating: 5 (3 reviews)
Rating: 5
Summary: A Classic
Comment: This is one of the early anthropological critiques of neo-classical economics. Many of the ideas expounded here are now being seriously pondered by economists who are attempting to find ways around them. Douglas,who is arguably the best known British anthropologist of her generation, has a particular insight into the way economist think - possibly because her husband is an economist. This makes her uniquely qualifed to provide us with an anthropology of consumption, that does not dismiss economists, as much as show how much they miss by not understanding the cultural dimensions of consumption.
Rating: 5
Summary: An excellent discussion of consumption and culture.
Comment: Written in 1979 and revised recently in 1996, Douglas and Isherwood's classic breaks through our own love/hate relationship with consumption and the biased interpretations of history and the present to look in a reasoned fashion at the patterns with which all people choose to buy things and the affiliations we create using these things. Lamenting the fact that economics has restricted itself by limiting human tastes to a black-box phenomenon, Douglas (a renowned, now retired, anthropologist) rips open the box and finds many convincing arguments for the uses of goods as a means of communication in all societies.
Additionally, they discuss previous and current ideas about why people save, or don't consume, and provide excellent comparative analyses between societies in Great Britain, blacks and whites in the US, the Nuer of the Sudan, and Zimbabwe's Lele people. What the reader comes away with is a deeper understanding of how people use consumption, both consciously and unconsciously, to provide information about themselves, send messages to others, and try to control the flow of culture and information to best benefit themselves and their interests.
The writing, which I have the impression was mostly written by Douglas since I'm familiar with her style from other books, feels a bit cerebral but is extremely lucid and will keep you on your toes with novel interpretations of familiar cultural phenomena.
Rating: 5
Summary: Accounting for tastes
Comment: In this book, a renowned structural anthropologist collaborates with an economist to propose an explanation for one of the great mysteries of economics: where do "preferences" come from? Much of neoclassical economics rests on the assumption that, once we know the basic desires and tastes for a given population, we can then understand how people make rational decisions about how to acquire them and how to allocate their resources. The actual preferences themselves, however, are a black box. Douglas & Isherwood tackle this problem, evaluating several theories of "rational" economic actors from cross-cultural and systems theoretical perspectives. Their answer is that many of these mysteries are not so mysterious after all: we have good reasons for valuing the things we value, and many of the apparently frivolous fads and fashions are in fact life-and-death matters. "Good taste" is an index of social connections, of reproductive fitness, of one's ability to mobilize resources -- and in a society increasingly dependent on information and services rather than physical products, the race to remain on the cutting edge becomes like traveling with the Red Queen, faster and faster just to stay in place. Along the way, Douglas throws out a number of gems which are incidental to her argument, including a proposal for why women's work is always and everywhere valued less than men's. This book is a must-read for anyone interested in what anthropologists can tell us about the deep logics of behavior in the consumer society.
![]() |
Title: The Social Life of Things : Commodities in Cultural Perspective by Arjun Appadurai ISBN: 0521357268 Publisher: Cambridge University Press Pub. Date: 29 January, 1988 List Price(USD): $26.00 |
![]() |
Title: Culture and Consumption: New Approaches to the Symbolic Character of Consumer Goods and Activities (Midland Book, 628) by Grant McCracken ISBN: 0253206286 Publisher: Indiana University Press Pub. Date: December, 1991 List Price(USD): $12.95 |
![]() |
Title: Material Cultures: Why Some Things Matter by Daniel Miller ISBN: 0226526011 Publisher: University of Chicago Press Pub. Date: March, 1998 List Price(USD): $22.00 |
![]() |
Title: The Meaning of Things : Domestic Symbols and the Self by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, Eugene Rochberg-Halton ISBN: 052128774X Publisher: Cambridge University Press Pub. Date: 30 October, 1981 List Price(USD): $37.00 |
![]() |
Title: The Consumer Society Reader by Juliet Schor, Douglas B. Holt, Douglas Holt ISBN: 1565845986 Publisher: New Press Pub. Date: August, 2000 List Price(USD): $22.95 |
Thank you for visiting www.AnyBook4Less.com and enjoy your savings!
Copyright� 2001-2021 Send your comments