Fashioning Old and New. Changing Consumer Patterns in Europe (1650-1900) (Paperback)


A continuing 'cry for the new', it is said, drives present-day consumerism. People are producing and buying new goods in ever-larger quantities. However, in the past, consumer choices for new products were paralleled and even overlapped by structurally embedded practices such as re-use, recycling and resale. Unfortunately far too little is known about these important practices. The 'birth of a consumer society' was grounded not only in the appearance of new products and new industries; a similar drive manifested itself in the handling, buying and selling of 'second-hand'. In this book then the editors confront and integrate historical research on the world of the new and the old. Papers focus on the relationship between material culture and novelty, fashion and innovation on the one hand; and/or patina, second-hand and re-cycling on the other. Differences existed in the use of old and new products according to time, place, social and gender groups. By paying close attention to this historical diversity, this book explores the changing meanings and motivations of consumption. The geographical coverage will be an urban one. The studied time frame will be 'the long eighteenth-century' (from circa 1650 until 1900). It was only then that rapid fashion changes, new imports and spreading industrialization changed the existing material culture dramatically. However, comparisons crossing time and place do place sweeping 'modern' assumptions in perspective. After all: who can decipher how the concepts old and new are changing today, with the current popularity of more responsible (social and ecological) forms of consumption and recycling, and with vintage-clothing and antique furniture back en vogue? Bruno Blonde is Research Professor at the Center for Urban History (University of Antwerp). His research interest includes urban networks, transport history and the history of consumption. Natacha Coquery is appointed Professor at the University of Tours. She has written extensively on the shopping and consumer habits of the French elites. Jon Stobart is appointed professor at the University of Northampton. He has worked on urban networks and consumption in spatial perspective. Ilja Van Damme is Postdoctoral Fellow of the Fund for Scientific Research. He has written a PhD on the interrelationships between consumer changes and retail evolutions.

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A continuing 'cry for the new', it is said, drives present-day consumerism. People are producing and buying new goods in ever-larger quantities. However, in the past, consumer choices for new products were paralleled and even overlapped by structurally embedded practices such as re-use, recycling and resale. Unfortunately far too little is known about these important practices. The 'birth of a consumer society' was grounded not only in the appearance of new products and new industries; a similar drive manifested itself in the handling, buying and selling of 'second-hand'. In this book then the editors confront and integrate historical research on the world of the new and the old. Papers focus on the relationship between material culture and novelty, fashion and innovation on the one hand; and/or patina, second-hand and re-cycling on the other. Differences existed in the use of old and new products according to time, place, social and gender groups. By paying close attention to this historical diversity, this book explores the changing meanings and motivations of consumption. The geographical coverage will be an urban one. The studied time frame will be 'the long eighteenth-century' (from circa 1650 until 1900). It was only then that rapid fashion changes, new imports and spreading industrialization changed the existing material culture dramatically. However, comparisons crossing time and place do place sweeping 'modern' assumptions in perspective. After all: who can decipher how the concepts old and new are changing today, with the current popularity of more responsible (social and ecological) forms of consumption and recycling, and with vintage-clothing and antique furniture back en vogue? Bruno Blonde is Research Professor at the Center for Urban History (University of Antwerp). His research interest includes urban networks, transport history and the history of consumption. Natacha Coquery is appointed Professor at the University of Tours. She has written extensively on the shopping and consumer habits of the French elites. Jon Stobart is appointed professor at the University of Northampton. He has worked on urban networks and consumption in spatial perspective. Ilja Van Damme is Postdoctoral Fellow of the Fund for Scientific Research. He has written a PhD on the interrelationships between consumer changes and retail evolutions.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Brepols N.V.

Country of origin

Belgium

Release date

May 2009

Availability

Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days

First published

April 2009

Editors

, , ,

Dimensions

249 x 178 x 15mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

233

ISBN-13

978-2-503-52878-6

Barcode

9782503528786

Categories

LSN

2-503-52878-3



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