Lexington Books
Pages: 194
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-7219-3 • Hardback • February 2013 • $99.00 • (£76.00)
978-1-4985-1508-5 • Paperback • March 2015 • $56.99 • (£44.00)
978-0-7391-7220-9 • eBook • February 2013 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
David Blanke is professor of history and chair at Texas A&M University—Corpus Christi.
David Steigerwald is professor o f history at The Ohio State University
Chapter 1. “Choice as the American Ideal: The Scholars’ Conundrum,” By David Blanke and David Steigerwald
Chapter 2. “The Imperial Politics of Globavore Consumption in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries,” by Kristin Hoganson
Chapter 3. “Emotions in the Marketplace,” by Susan J. Matt
Chapter 4. “Inconspicuous Consumers in the United States-Mexico Borderlands,” by Alexis McCrossen
Chapter 5. “Beyond the Producer/Consumer Divide: Expert Consumers in American Home Audio, 1945-1975,” by Jeffrey Tang
Chapter 6. “David Riesman on the Frontiers of Consumption,” by David Steigerwald
Chapter 7. “Aggravating Autos, Gyp Mechanics and the Limits of Consumer Advocacy,” by Kevin Borg
Chapter 8. “Behold their Mighty Hands – Commercial Film and the Perversity of Modern Mass Consumerism,” by David Blanke
Chapter 9. “Moses and the Marketplace: Ten Commandments Monuments and the Postwar Youth Crisis,” by Joseph Haker
Chapter 10. “Unraveling the Culture of War: Global Hollywood and American Politics in the Age of 9/11,” by Lary May
Chapter 11. “Concluding Thoughts,” by David Blanke and David Steigerwald
Undergraduates and nonacademics should have no trouble making sense of the arguments. . . .Most of the essays explain how consumers acted through goods to improve their lives and make sense of the world.
— Journal of American History
This wide-ranging collection of original, highly readable, and historically precise studies of American encounters with goods and media offers us fresh ways of understanding consumer agency in 20th-century America.
— Gary Cross, distinguished professor of modern history, Pennsylvania State University
This collection points us toward the next generation of scholarship in American consumer history. By drawing from a diverse array of approaches—in particular, intellectual history, the history of emotions, borderlands studies, cultural studies, and global history—this volume shows the prospects for consumer history as a way of both advancing unique perspectives and synthesizing and consolidating emerging approaches. By highlighting the issue and the problem of “agency” the contributors to this volume have offered a wide-ranging meditation on the meaning of consumption in history.
— Lawrence B. Glickman, University of South Carolina