Consuming PlacesRoutledge, 2002 M03 11 - 272 páginas John Urry has been discussing and writing on these and similar questions for the past fifteen years. In Consuming Places, he gathers together his most significant contributions. Urry begins with an extensive review of the connections between society, time and space. The concept of 'society', the nature of 'locality', the significance of 'economic restructuring', and the concept of the 'rural', are examined in relationship to place. The book then considers how places have been transformed by the development of service occupations and industries. Concepts of the service class and post-industrialism are theoretically and empirically discussed. Attention is then devoted to the ways in which places are consumed. Particular attention is devoted to the visual character of such consumption and its implications for place and people. The implications for nature and the environment are also explored in depth. The changing nature of consumption, and the tensions between commodification and collective enthusiasms, are explored in the context of the changing ways in which the countryside is consumed. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 27
... theoretical endeavour. To know something as apparently simple as the social relations of place and its consumption is to have to engage with a sophisticated array of social theorising. Indeed almost all the major social and cultural ...
... theoretical issue has concerned the concept of 'community'. Bell and Newby (1976) have usefully distinguished between the three different senses of this concept (see also Savage and Warde 1993: 104). First, there is its use in a simply ...
... theoretical object' (1977, 1978). He argued that urban sociology (and by implication rural sociology) did not possess such a theoretical object; there was a wide variety of merely common-sense concepts such as town, city, community, the ...
... theoretical object' for urban sociology, namely 'collective consumption', then seeks to use this to explain particular kinds of spatially varied politics. He argues that these forms of collective consumption cannot be provided ...
... theoretical debate has concerned the significance of time and space for the development of a supposed postmodernism. I will highlight three aspects here relating to place (otherwise see Harvey 1989; Soja 1989; Lash 1990b; Jameson 1991 ...
Contenido
18 | |
SOME VICES AND VIRTUES | 33 |
SOCIETY SPACE AND LOCALITY | 63 |
RESTRUCTURING THE RURAL | 77 |
CAPITALIST PRODUCTION SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT | 90 |
IS BRITAIN THE FIRSTPOSTINDUSTRIAL SOCIETY? | 112 |
THE CONSUMPTION OF TOURISM | 129 |
TOURISM TRAVEL AND THE MODERN SUBJECT | 141 |
REINTERPRETING LOCAL CULTURE | 152 |
TOURISM EUROPE AND IDENTITY | 163 |
THE TOURIST GAZE AND THE ENVIRONMENT | 173 |
THE MAKING OF THE LAKE DISTRICT | 193 |
SOCIAL IDENTITY LEISURE AND THE COUNTRYSIDE | 211 |