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Course Description

This course explores how the things we buy shape our personal identities and how individuals relate to corporations and advertisers, in the context of the emergence of modern consumer society from the 18th century to the present. It critically examines the shift from home-production economies to mass production. Examining how developments such as department stores, product branding, modern advertising, urbanization, and suburbanization have shaped society, politics, and the economy, the course provides a historical context for contemporary debates about consumer culture.

What You'll Learn

Upon successful completion of this course, you will be able to:

  • Appreciate the value of an historical approach when analyzing consumer culture and consumer issues
  • Critically analyze the origins and evolution of consumer culture in North America and to effectively explain these ideas in a written format, identifying and defining key issues
  • Develop their own interpretations about issues in consumer culture based on ability to summarize and compare a broad range of readings and evidence from both primary and secondary sources
  • Distinguish and compare the spatially and temporally specific ways consumer culture has both influenced and been influenced by a range of social, cultural, political, and economic developments
  • Discuss consumer culture as an interplay between manufacturers, advertisers, sales people, and consumers, wherein individuals from each of these groups have occupied historically specific identities as a result of their relationships with consumption

Additional Requirements

Prerequisite(s): 2.00 credits

Technical Requirements

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*Course details are subject to change.

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