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Tracing non-consumption through space and time: A historical analysis of how spatial temporal politics of practices restrain contemporary sustainable consumption

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Tracing non-consumption through space and time: A historical analysis of how spatial temporal politics of practices restrain contemporary sustainable consumption. / Scheurenbrand, Klara; Parsons, Elizabeth; Patterson, Anthony.
Research in Consumer Culture Theory. ed. / Patsiaouras G.; Fitchett J.; Earley A.J. Vol. 3 Leicester, 2019. p. 78-79.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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Scheurenbrand K, Parsons E, Patterson A. Tracing non-consumption through space and time: A historical analysis of how spatial temporal politics of practices restrain contemporary sustainable consumption. In G. P, J. F, A.J. E, editors, Research in Consumer Culture Theory. Vol. 3. Leicester. 2019. p. 78-79

Author

Scheurenbrand, Klara ; Parsons, Elizabeth ; Patterson, Anthony. / Tracing non-consumption through space and time : A historical analysis of how spatial temporal politics of practices restrain contemporary sustainable consumption. Research in Consumer Culture Theory. editor / Patsiaouras G. ; Fitchett J. ; Earley A.J. Vol. 3 Leicester, 2019. pp. 78-79

Bibtex

@inproceedings{22f51b79840b416d9a486be971abf75b,
title = "Tracing non-consumption through space and time: A historical analysis of how spatial temporal politics of practices restrain contemporary sustainable consumption",
abstract = "This historical ethnographic project explores the spatialtemporal dimensions of the politics of practices and their impact on non-consumption. Within an intensified sustainability debate in marketing (McDonagh and Prothero, 2014, McDonagh, 2017), practice nexi (Hui et al., 2017) become central to understanding the impossibilities of sustainable consumption (Scheurenbrand, et al. 2018). Research indicates that practice constellations, intersections and dynamics give insights into political tensions and power relations (Watson, 2017, Denegri Knott et al., 2019), which can have negative impact on the life of sustainable practices. It is thus time to revisit the concept of non-consumption under a practice ontology to explore why unsustainable ways of life persist, while sustainable consumption is unsuccessful in establishing itself despite policy attempts and willing consumers to resist (Cherrier et al., 2011, Evans, 2011, Chatzidakis and Lee, 2012).",
author = "Klara Scheurenbrand and Elizabeth Parsons and Anthony Patterson",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "78--79",
editor = "Patsiaouras G. and J., {Fitchett } and Earley A.J.",
booktitle = "Research in Consumer Culture Theory",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Tracing non-consumption through space and time

T2 - A historical analysis of how spatial temporal politics of practices restrain contemporary sustainable consumption

AU - Scheurenbrand, Klara

AU - Parsons, Elizabeth

AU - Patterson, Anthony

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - This historical ethnographic project explores the spatialtemporal dimensions of the politics of practices and their impact on non-consumption. Within an intensified sustainability debate in marketing (McDonagh and Prothero, 2014, McDonagh, 2017), practice nexi (Hui et al., 2017) become central to understanding the impossibilities of sustainable consumption (Scheurenbrand, et al. 2018). Research indicates that practice constellations, intersections and dynamics give insights into political tensions and power relations (Watson, 2017, Denegri Knott et al., 2019), which can have negative impact on the life of sustainable practices. It is thus time to revisit the concept of non-consumption under a practice ontology to explore why unsustainable ways of life persist, while sustainable consumption is unsuccessful in establishing itself despite policy attempts and willing consumers to resist (Cherrier et al., 2011, Evans, 2011, Chatzidakis and Lee, 2012).

AB - This historical ethnographic project explores the spatialtemporal dimensions of the politics of practices and their impact on non-consumption. Within an intensified sustainability debate in marketing (McDonagh and Prothero, 2014, McDonagh, 2017), practice nexi (Hui et al., 2017) become central to understanding the impossibilities of sustainable consumption (Scheurenbrand, et al. 2018). Research indicates that practice constellations, intersections and dynamics give insights into political tensions and power relations (Watson, 2017, Denegri Knott et al., 2019), which can have negative impact on the life of sustainable practices. It is thus time to revisit the concept of non-consumption under a practice ontology to explore why unsustainable ways of life persist, while sustainable consumption is unsuccessful in establishing itself despite policy attempts and willing consumers to resist (Cherrier et al., 2011, Evans, 2011, Chatzidakis and Lee, 2012).

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

VL - 3

SP - 78

EP - 79

BT - Research in Consumer Culture Theory

A2 - G., Patsiaouras

A2 - J., Fitchett

A2 - A.J., Earley

CY - Leicester

ER -