Consumption and Gender

Penny Griffin

Penny Griffin

UNSW Sydney, Australia

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First published: 15 April 2019

Abstract

Although the development of consumption in post-Fordist, postindustrial societies is relatively new, there had until recently been little systematic examination of the historical foundations of the relationship between consumption and gender. Gender scholars have sought to remedy this absence, investigating the gendered social relations that prescribe where, how, and why consumption takes place and highlighting the gendered ways in which people acquire, possess, process, and respond to commodities.

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