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Mother, consumer, trader: Gendering the commodification of second-hand economies since the recession

Mother, consumer, trader: Gendering the commodification of second-hand economies since the recession
Mother, consumer, trader: Gendering the commodification of second-hand economies since the recession
In Western contexts, ‘hand-me-down’ and sharing economies of children’s clothes, toys and equipment remain one of the most normalised cultures of second-hand consumption. This article explores the strategies used by mothers to realise the most economic value from these economies in current austere times with the increased possibilities offered by the democratisation of informal buying and selling spaces. Drawing on an ethnographic study of mothers participating in nearly new sales in the United Kingdom, the article outlines the myriad moralities influencing mothers’ everyday consumption, use and disposal of children’s goods. It argues that providing material goods for children is a thrifty skill with mothers thinking past point-of-purchase to the resale potential of second-hand items. This strategy of trading used children’s goods as a practice to circulate resources in the family and keep up with the commodification of childhood.
1469-5405
532-550
Waight, Emma
b9491367-72bf-42d1-8f79-56b2d27d5bc3
Waight, Emma
b9491367-72bf-42d1-8f79-56b2d27d5bc3

Waight, Emma (2019) Mother, consumer, trader: Gendering the commodification of second-hand economies since the recession. Journal of Consumer Culture, 19 (4), 532-550. (doi:10.1177/1469540519872069).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In Western contexts, ‘hand-me-down’ and sharing economies of children’s clothes, toys and equipment remain one of the most normalised cultures of second-hand consumption. This article explores the strategies used by mothers to realise the most economic value from these economies in current austere times with the increased possibilities offered by the democratisation of informal buying and selling spaces. Drawing on an ethnographic study of mothers participating in nearly new sales in the United Kingdom, the article outlines the myriad moralities influencing mothers’ everyday consumption, use and disposal of children’s goods. It argues that providing material goods for children is a thrifty skill with mothers thinking past point-of-purchase to the resale potential of second-hand items. This strategy of trading used children’s goods as a practice to circulate resources in the family and keep up with the commodification of childhood.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 16 September 2019
Published date: 1 November 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 437147
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/437147
ISSN: 1469-5405
PURE UUID: 20416a72-7234-489c-9746-24e54868f0e3

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Date deposited: 17 Jan 2020 17:36
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:49

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Author: Emma Waight

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