Consuming PlacesPsychology Press, 1995 - 257 páginas John Urry's "Consuming Places," discusses what Urry terms the "makings of place"--that is, distinctive features of different places which make them either attractive or repellant to consumers, whether visitors or investors. Urry also explores the effects of consumption on these places and their respective local populations. Urry has been discussing and writing on these and similar issues 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, and examines such themes as locality, ruralism, and economic restructuring in relationship to place. The text considers how the development of service occupations and industries have transformed places through the emergence of a post-industrial service class. Urry then directs our attention to the nature of consumption in terms of its implications for place and people, citing natural and environmental concerns and the tensions between commodification and collective enthusiasms. This wide-ranging book will prove indispensable for enthusiasts of geography, sociology, and urban, regional and cultural studies. |
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Contenido
SOME VICES AND VIRTUES | 33 |
SOCIETY SPACE AND LOCALITY | 63 |
RESTRUCTURING THE RURAL | 77 |
CAPITALIST PRODUCTION SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT | 90 |
IS BRITAIN THE FIRST POSTINDUSTRIAL 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 |
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Términos y frases comunes
activity aesthetic analysis argues aspects attractive become Britain British capital capitalist causal powers cent centre changes characteristics cities Cleator Moor collective action complex concept conservation consider consumed contemporary countryside culture debates deskilling discourse distinctive division of labour economic effects Elster England environment environmental especially example forms Giddens growth heritage images important increased increasingly individual industrial involved John Urry kind Lake District Lancashire landscape large numbers Lash and Urry leisure Littler locality manufacturing Marxism mobility modern nature nineteenth century objects particular patterns place-myth political postmodern prisoner's dilemma processes production realised recent regional relations of production relationship relatively restructuring result rural rural sociology scientific management Scott Lash Second sense service class significant social relations social sciences society sociology space specific structure suggests summarises temporal theoretical time-space tourist gaze transformed urban urban sociology viewed visitors visual consumption Wigan workers