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Consumption and Generational Change
A01=Ian Jones
Age Period Cohort Models
aging and society
Artificial Society
Author_Ian Jones
Birth Cohort Groups
Birth Cohorts
Bryan S. Turner
Budgetary Margin
Category=JBFS
Chris Gilleard
Christina Victor
Comparing Welfare Regime
consumer behavior theory
David J. Ekerdt
Dick Wiggins
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Esping Andersen's Classification
Esping Andersen’s Classification
Familialistic Regime
Fanny Bugeja
generational cohort analysis
Generational Entelechy
Generational Inequalities
generational shifts in consumption patterns
George P. Moschis
Home Ownership Rates
Housing Constraint
Ian Rees Jones
INSEE
Inter-cohort Differences
Intergenerational Inequalities
Intra-generational Inequality
Intragenerational Inequalities
leisure studies
Louis Chauvel
Martin Hyde
Mass Consumer Society
Max Weber's Sociology
Max Weber’s Sociology
Pat Thane
Paul Higgs
Possession Motives
social stratification
Trente Glorieuses
Tv Evangelism
Tv Ownership
UK Estimate
Welfare Regime
welfare state comparison
Product details
- ISBN 9781412808576
- Weight: 476g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 15 Jan 2009
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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The study of consumption in social life is growing. Moving from being a relatively unimportant part of the processes of production, distribution, and exchange, questions of how people consume and to what ends now occupy center stage. Today's capitalism is exemplified by a global arena of consumption in which distance is no obstacle to distribution and ownership. Equally, social distinctions that accompanied classically "modern" forms of consumption are now more complex and fluid than classifications of "high" and "popular" culture allow.This book addresses the rise of consumer culture and the various attempts to explain and account for it. It considers the view that a particular generational framework was formed in the post-war period and has been carried on into the early twentieth century with particular consequences for the experience of later life. The rise of individualism, of mass consumption, leisure and lifestyles have been accompanied by the democratization of social forms and for many a corrosion of community and social cohesion. The text highlights how understanding is gained from examining the generational habits that developed in tandem with the rise of mass consumption.Drawing on historical perspectives and comparative studies, the book addresses social change with reference to generation effects and conflict. Having set the scene in terms of the literature on consumption, lifestyles and generational change, the volume poses key questions in relation to the transformation of later life that are addressed in turn by the contributors. This is a key volume as we enter the second decade of a new century.
Ian Rees Jones is professor of sociology at Bangor University. He has published extensively in the field of medical sociology addressing health inequalities, chronic illness and medical decision making. Paul Higgs is reader in medical sociology at University College London. He has published widely in both social gerontology and medical sociology. David J. Ekerdt is professor of sociology and director of the Gerontology Center at the University of Kansas. He studies work, retirement, and residential transitions in later life.
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