Blazing culture
As they come off the assembly line, consumer goods might as well be lumps of coal. They are utterly inanimate, so much plastic, metal and/or fabric.
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As they come off the assembly line, consumer goods might as well be lumps of coal. They are utterly inanimate, so much plastic, metal and/or fabric.
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Ulf Hannerz: Cultural Complexity : Studies in the Social Organization of Meaning
Tyler Cowen: Creative Destruction : How Globalization Is Changing the World's Cultures
Stuart Kauffman: At Home in the Universe: The Search for Laws of Self-Organization and Complexity
Rosalyn Baxandall: Picture Windows: How the Suburbs Happened
Philip Kotler: Principles of Marketing (11th Edition) (Principles of Marketing)
Mary C. Waters: Ethnic Options: Choosing Ethnic Identities in America
David Brooks: Bobos In Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There
Chuck Klosterman: Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs : A Low Culture Manifesto
Brands, Consumers, Symbols and Research : Sidney J Levy on Marketing (1-Off Series)
Grant, it's a very intriguing exegesis! Is the concept of "purpose" central to attaching meaning to the inanimate artifacts of manufacturing? Do products "live" without being put to some use?
Posted by: Jonathan Salem Baskin | January 08, 2009 at 04:26 PM
Hi Grant,
What a very interesting topic! I'm not so certain that it's always the marketers that give meaning to material objects, but rather the possessors. Of course marketers need to give some initial reason for people to buy them, but it is those people who have bought them who must continue to keep them alive by investing and reinvesting them with meaning, which I find a fascinating process. If the goods have been gifted or if they have been bought for oneself, there is likely very different meanings.
As to whether there are any meanings that are implausible to invest in material goods? I think that there is probably no limit to people's ability to imagine meaning in objects. I could be wrong, though. :)
Posted by: Steph | January 08, 2009 at 09:34 PM