Cosmopolitanism, Markets, and Consumption A Critical Global Perspective

This book addresses the complicated question of how markets and consumption create the possibilities for cross-cultural exchanges and the multicultural pleasures of omnivorous consumption, whilst at the same time building new boundaries and distinctions, paving the way for new exploitative relations...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Emontspool, Julie (Editor), Woodward, Ian (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham Palgrave Macmillan 2018, 2018
Edition:1st ed. 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Table of Contents:
  • 1. Introduction; Julie Emontspool and Ian Woodward
  • Part I: The Cosmopolitan Concept: Definition, Uses and Challenges
  • 2. Conceptualizing the field: Consuming the Other, Marketing Difference; Ian Woodward and Julie Emontspool
  • 3. On decomposing the ‘thick’ and the ‘thin’ for measuring cosmopolitanism in multicultural marketplaces: why unpacking the foreign and global aspects of cosmopolitanism matters; Eva Kipnis
  • 4. Aesthetic-cultural cosmopolitanism: a new kind of “good taste” among French youth; Vincenzo Cicchelli and Sylvie Octobre
  • Part II: Cosmopolitan Spaces
  • 5. Global Brands and cosmopolitanism: building cosmopolitan attitudes through global consumers in Sao Paulo; Viviane Riegel
  • 6. Cosmopolitanism and its sociomaterial construction in the servicescape; Bernardo Figueiredo, Jonathan Bean and Hanne Pico Larsen
  • 7. Cosmopolitan and non-cosmopolitan surfaces; Eduardo de la Fuente
  • Part III: Ethics for a Global Humanity
  • 8. Becoming morally cosmopolitan: the interplayof inner-outer moral commitments in the marketplace; Pilar Rojas Gaviria
  • 9. ‘Festivals implicate others’: framing cosmopolitan encounters at a European festival; Dario Verderame
  • 10. Buying the nation and beyond: discursive dilemmas in debates around cosmopolitan consumption; Farida Fozdar
  • Part IV: Concluding Perspectives
  • 11. Will consumer cosmopolitanism save the world? Should it?; Dannie Kjeldgaard
  • 12. Hopelessly adrift? Cosmopolitanism, global citizenship and moral commitment; Zlatko Skrbis