In this paper I argue that in the now-extensive work on the sociology of consumption there is very little that addresses directly the important issue of disposal. Furthermore, I argue that disposal is not just about questions of waste and rubbish but is implicated more broadly in the ways in which people manage absence within social relations. I develop this argument through a critical engagement with the work of Mary Douglas, Rolland Munro, Michael Thompson, and Robert Hertz. I seek to show that disposal is never final as is implied by the notion of rubbish but involves issues of managing social relations and their representation around themes of movement, transformation, incompleteness, and return. I suggest that rather than see the rubbi...
Scholars across the humanities and social sciences have long sought to theorize waste, and more part...
How do objects that have lost their value become valuable once again? Rubbish is something we ig...
This paper explores how British and Brazilian consumers dispose of their unwanted or no longer used ...
(ISBN: 9780415960984), 189 pp. It is perhaps a bit peculiar to suggest that waste matters, especiall...
This article reflects on the meanings of waste in our everyday lives. It argues that a changing rela...
This thesis focuses on the complex cultural, social and material factors that combine to hasten the ...
This article addresses the issue of disposability in modern Anglo-American society, through a histor...
This study examines how consumers who engage in voluntary simplicity experience disposal in relation...
This thesis examines the relationships people have with rubbish in everyday life. Focusing on domest...
Disposition and disposal are intriguing terms for, while they share the same roots, disposition is n...
Consumer research has traditionally presented the consumption process in three stages – acquisition,...
This research calls for a reconsideration of the notion of rubbish; one that does not consider dispo...
In social sciences, when you talk about waste, there is one book you cannot miss. It is called Purit...
International audienceThe aim of this article is to understand how objects circulate between people ...
The term “alienation” is used in sociological analysis of production systems and, recently, in studi...
Scholars across the humanities and social sciences have long sought to theorize waste, and more part...
How do objects that have lost their value become valuable once again? Rubbish is something we ig...
This paper explores how British and Brazilian consumers dispose of their unwanted or no longer used ...
(ISBN: 9780415960984), 189 pp. It is perhaps a bit peculiar to suggest that waste matters, especiall...
This article reflects on the meanings of waste in our everyday lives. It argues that a changing rela...
This thesis focuses on the complex cultural, social and material factors that combine to hasten the ...
This article addresses the issue of disposability in modern Anglo-American society, through a histor...
This study examines how consumers who engage in voluntary simplicity experience disposal in relation...
This thesis examines the relationships people have with rubbish in everyday life. Focusing on domest...
Disposition and disposal are intriguing terms for, while they share the same roots, disposition is n...
Consumer research has traditionally presented the consumption process in three stages – acquisition,...
This research calls for a reconsideration of the notion of rubbish; one that does not consider dispo...
In social sciences, when you talk about waste, there is one book you cannot miss. It is called Purit...
International audienceThe aim of this article is to understand how objects circulate between people ...
The term “alienation” is used in sociological analysis of production systems and, recently, in studi...
Scholars across the humanities and social sciences have long sought to theorize waste, and more part...
How do objects that have lost their value become valuable once again? Rubbish is something we ig...
This paper explores how British and Brazilian consumers dispose of their unwanted or no longer used ...