Why do we buy? How do our acts of--and ideas about--consumption
impact our selves, our institutions, and our societies? An incisive
response to these questions, "Why I Buy" explains how consumption
came to give meaning and value to social and personal life.
Balancing psychological, conceptual, and historical analyses with
examples drawn from popular culture and mass media, Rami Gabriel
traces the ways in which beliefs about the self--including dualism,
individualism, and expressivism--influence consumer behavior. These
understandings of the self, Gabriel argues, structure the values
that Americans seek and find in consumer society; they therefore
have structural consequences for our cultural, political, and
economic lives. For example, Gabriel describes how imbalances in
the institutions of participatory politics have directly resulted
from a consumer society centered on powerful nongovernmental
institutions and a scattered body of disengaged citizens whose
social and individual needs are not primarily satisfied through
civic involvement. By exploring the relationship between our
individual needs and our institutions, Gabriel ultimately points
the way toward transformations that could lead to a more sustaining
and sustainable society.
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