'Just normal and homely': the presence, absence and othering of consumer culture in everyday imagining
'Just normal and homely': the presence, absence and othering of consumer culture in everyday imagining
The imaginative aspects of consumption have been recognized as playing a key role in accounting for Western consumerism, yet there has been surprisingly little attention paid to the role of imagining in everyday life. Previous consumer research has tended to focus on goods and services within daydreams and fantasies so that goods seem to be central to, and key resources in, the construction of imagined scenarios. Here we argue that this methodological framing has restricted a broader understanding of the imagination and the contextualization of consumption within it. By analysing phenomenological accounts that placed imagining ahead of consumption as the focus of the study, we found that individuals readily envisioned common cultural desires for successful relationships, happiness and love in positive imagined futures, where goods may be merely assumed as part of the background, or dismissed in favour of preferred emotional experiences. As such this article uses Law’s (2004) conceptions of presence, manifest absence and othering to provide a more nuanced analysis of how and where consumption may be seen in the imagination. In this way we suggest that previous narratives of the consumer imagination have neglected individuals’ autonomy in both removing consumer practices and positioning social relationships as more prominent
261-281
Jenkins, R.
fa0b6f14-742f-468b-9061-d5f047c496f1
Nixon, E.
478fa786-9abd-49aa-b049-fc093944bf48
Molesworth, M.
48a49a79-1d99-4120-b0aa-578e42541724
2011
Jenkins, R.
fa0b6f14-742f-468b-9061-d5f047c496f1
Nixon, E.
478fa786-9abd-49aa-b049-fc093944bf48
Molesworth, M.
48a49a79-1d99-4120-b0aa-578e42541724
Jenkins, R., Nixon, E. and Molesworth, M.
(2011)
'Just normal and homely': the presence, absence and othering of consumer culture in everyday imagining.
Journal of Consumer Culture, 11 (2), .
(doi:10.1177/1469540511402446).
Abstract
The imaginative aspects of consumption have been recognized as playing a key role in accounting for Western consumerism, yet there has been surprisingly little attention paid to the role of imagining in everyday life. Previous consumer research has tended to focus on goods and services within daydreams and fantasies so that goods seem to be central to, and key resources in, the construction of imagined scenarios. Here we argue that this methodological framing has restricted a broader understanding of the imagination and the contextualization of consumption within it. By analysing phenomenological accounts that placed imagining ahead of consumption as the focus of the study, we found that individuals readily envisioned common cultural desires for successful relationships, happiness and love in positive imagined futures, where goods may be merely assumed as part of the background, or dismissed in favour of preferred emotional experiences. As such this article uses Law’s (2004) conceptions of presence, manifest absence and othering to provide a more nuanced analysis of how and where consumption may be seen in the imagination. In this way we suggest that previous narratives of the consumer imagination have neglected individuals’ autonomy in both removing consumer practices and positioning social relationships as more prominent
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 2011
Organisations:
Centre for Relational Leadership & Change
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 362340
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/362340
ISSN: 1469-5405
PURE UUID: 953d2164-2228-4f02-a82c-47c3a3b4cde3
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 24 Feb 2014 08:46
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 16:03
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
R. Jenkins
Author:
E. Nixon
Author:
M. Molesworth
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics