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Chapter

FROM COUNTERCULTURE MOVEMENT TO MAINSTREAM MARKET: EMERGENCE OF THE U.S. ORGANIC FOOD INDUSTRY

Chapter

FROM COUNTERCULTURE MOVEMENT TO MAINSTREAM MARKET: EMERGENCE OF THE U.S. ORGANIC FOOD INDUSTRY

DOI link for FROM COUNTERCULTURE MOVEMENT TO MAINSTREAM MARKET: EMERGENCE OF THE U.S. ORGANIC FOOD INDUSTRY

FROM COUNTERCULTURE MOVEMENT TO MAINSTREAM MARKET: EMERGENCE OF THE U.S. ORGANIC FOOD INDUSTRY book

FROM COUNTERCULTURE MOVEMENT TO MAINSTREAM MARKET: EMERGENCE OF THE U.S. ORGANIC FOOD INDUSTRY

DOI link for FROM COUNTERCULTURE MOVEMENT TO MAINSTREAM MARKET: EMERGENCE OF THE U.S. ORGANIC FOOD INDUSTRY

FROM COUNTERCULTURE MOVEMENT TO MAINSTREAM MARKET: EMERGENCE OF THE U.S. ORGANIC FOOD INDUSTRY book

ByJohn W. Schouten, Diane M. Martin, Hedon Blakaj, Andrei Botez
BookAssembling Consumption

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Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2015
Imprint Routledge
Pages 11
eBook ISBN 9781315743608

ABSTRACT

This chapter considers the potential for research that reconsiders boundaries commonly established between consumers and consumption environments. The chapter questioned recurrent dualistic categories that feature both in consumer culture and in consumer-culture theory. The chapter examines what dualisms are used for in market contexts, before specifically exploring human/non-human and nature/culture dualisms in consumer research. This chapter takes a dualism to represent: first, the relationship between two opposing and ontologically separate categories that people draw on as linguistic devices to understand, give meaning and represent their life worlds; and second, a mode of theory building reliant on the categorical interplay between binaries. Dualisms are common feature es of everyday consumer cultures. The aim of this questioning is to generate different ways to think about markets and consumer cultures. Finally, the chapter consider the case for retaining dualisms, by acknowledging how they may feature differently in consumers' and consumer researchers' knowledge-making practices.

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