Results 261 to 270 of about 354,127 (316)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

The Culture of Consumption

2023
Abstract Chapter 5 presents the drivers of consumption by responding to the question: “why eat it?” The response is complex and sometimes contradictory. There are patterns and nuances but no over-riding motivation. Tradition, taste, availability, cost, and lack of alternative proteins are the main intertwining reasons.
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Cultures of Consumption

2007
Abstract In 1851, consumption was a matter of survival for many— of finding enough to eat, and clothes, shelter, and heat to remain healthy. The poorest members of society had their pleasures too, from family and friends, the consolations of religion, or the sociability of the public house.
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Culture and Consumption

1990
Connect with Grant McCracken: <a href="http://cultureby.com/">Blog</a> <a href="http://twitter.com/Grant27>Twitter</a>
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Cultural Geography, Consumption and the City

Geography, 2006
This article has three main aims. The first is to highlight the importance of culture and consumption to contemporary geographical inquiry. The second is to show some of the ways in which culture and consumption have been theorised, especially in the context of the city.
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Culture and Consumption

2010
This chapter focuses on the intersections of culture and consumption. It takes up recent investigations of consumption outside of sociology; sociological studies of consumption, outside the claimed territory of economic sociology; and consequent challenges to economic sociology.
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Cultural Consumption, Cultural Expression

2008
The multiple belief and value systems bound up with family practices in South Asian Muslim families in Britain were explored in Chapter 3. This chapter will explore how such value systems are enacted in the context of daily family practices, with a particular emphasis on what families do; what they eat, how they dress and how they choose to spend their
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Time and Preferences in Cultural Consumption

2007
Not only production takes time - so does consumption. The literature related to the problem of the so-called “cost-disease phenomenon” in the live arts has uncovered the inescapable time constraints that shape the production of specific cultural activities.
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Cultural Goods Consumption and Cultural Capital [PDF]

open access: possible, 2000
Cultural capital is assumed to benefit all members of society. It is built up by the aggregate consumption of cultural goods and is diminished through depreciation. In the no-policy market economy, consumers tend to ignore the beneficial external effects of their cultural good consumption on the other consumers (and on themselves) through augmenting ...
Rüdiger Pethig, Sao-Wen Cheng
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Wine Consumption and Culture: A Cross‐Country Analysis

Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy, 2021
Lara Agnoli, J François Outreville
exaly  

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