Inconspicuous Consumption: Non-Display Goods and Identity Formation

Volume: 14, Issue: 4, Pages: 412 - 438
Published: Oct 4, 2007
Abstract
In the study of ancient material culture, archaeologists have primarily focused on the use of objects for display and communication. This social function of material culture could only have developed on the basis of individual cognitive capacity for the use of goods as materializations of symbolic behavior. To explore the deeply held relationship of identity to material culture, this paper focuses on goods that are utilized away from the gaze of...
Paper Details
Title
Inconspicuous Consumption: Non-Display Goods and Identity Formation
Published Date
Oct 4, 2007
Volume
14
Issue
4
Pages
412 - 438
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