ABSTRACT

There is now a widespread interest in reuse in many domains, from opera houses built over old warehouses, to vintage clothes and everyday goods incorporating repurposed materials or parts. Despite its ubiquity, this extensive creative work is typically seen in narrowly environmental terms, as a means of reducing carbon, resource use or waste. However, as this volume shows, reuse also has aesthetic and cultural dimensions and a rich social currency, invoked to consciously subvert the accelerated consumer culture responsible for our unfolding environmental crisis.

In three parts, the essays in this book consider reuse in terms of values, aesthetics and meaning, its application in contemporary urban and spatial settings, and the revival of social practices involving a more conscious recourse to reuse and repair. These are bookended by the editors' essays: the first, on the significant relationship between reuse and technological and social acceleration evident in the surrounding consumer society; and the last, on the multiple forms of reuse deployed in a contemporary alternative building practice, and their contributions to presenting alternative ways of living in the world.

Challenging dominant understandings of ‘waste’ and ‘consumption’, Subverting Consumerism shows how reuse has become a means for many to creatively engage with the past, and to discover a continuity and sense of place eroded by the accelerative regimes of contemporary consumerism. Becoming a means of resistance, and offering a range of aesthetic, social and economic possibilities, reuse can be found to subvert and challenge the obsessive quest for the new found in contemporary consumerism.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|23 pages

Acceleration, consumerism and reuse

A changing paradigm

part 1|55 pages

Culture, meaning, and value

chapter 2|16 pages

Using art to research diverse economies

Social experiments in re-valuing waste

chapter 3|18 pages

Repurposing cultural heritage collections

The aesthetics and meaning of reuse

chapter 4|19 pages

The devil’s horns are made from toilet rolls

Creating costumes and communities from ‘junk’ objects

part 2|53 pages

Strategies and landscapes of reuse

chapter 5|18 pages

Renew(ing) Newcastle and complicating capitalism

Contributory economies, artisanal production, and the DIY occupation of disused commercial space

chapter 6|14 pages

Rapid urbanization and Wang Shu’s architecture

The use of spolia and vernacular traditions in China

chapter 7|19 pages

Public space for changing times

Reuse strategies in transforming the ‘wastelands’ of cities

part 3|93 pages

Reviving practices of repair and reuse

chapter 8|19 pages

Fix it

Barriers to repair and opportunities for change

chapter 9|20 pages

ReDress

Maximizing component reuse for fashion

chapter 10|18 pages

Composting as everyday alchemy

Producing compost from food scraps in twenty-first century urban environments

chapter 11|34 pages

Reuse in earthship construction

Reclaiming the past to shape the future