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Living It Up

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Economic downturns and terrorist attacks notwithstanding, America's love affair with luxury continues unabated. Over the last several years, luxury spending in the United States has been growing fo...
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  • 03 April 2002
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Economic downturns and terrorist attacks notwithstanding, America's love affair with luxury continues unabated. Over the last several years, luxury spending in the United States has been growing four times faster than overall spending. It has been characterized by political leaders as vital to the health of the American economy as a whole, even as an act of patriotism. Accordingly, indices of consumer confidence and purchasing seem unaffected by recession. This necessary consumption of unnecessary items and services is going on at all but the lowest layers of society: J.C. Penney now offers day spa treatments; Kmart sells cashmere bedspreads. So many products are claiming luxury status today that the credibility of the category itself is strained: for example, the name "pashmina" had to be invented to top mere cashmere.

We see luxury everywhere: in storefronts, advertisements, even in the workings of our imaginations. But what is it? How is it manufactured on the factory floor and in the minds of consumers? Who cares about it and who buys it? And how concerned should we be that luxuries are commanding a larger and larger percentage of both our disposable income and our aspirations?

Trolling the upscale malls of America, making his way toward the Mecca of Las Vegas, James B. Twitchell comes to some remarkable conclusions. The democratization of luxury, he contends, has been the single most important marketing phenomenon of our times. In the pages of Living It Up, Twitchell commits the academic heresy of paying respect to popular luxury consumption as a force that has united the country and the globe in a way that no war, movement, or ideology ever has. What's more, he claims, the shopping experience for Americans today has its roots in the spiritual, the religious, and the transcendent.

Deft and subtle writing, audacious ideas, and a fine sense of humor inform this entertaining and insightful book.

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Price: $60.00
Pages: 448
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 03 April 2002
ISBN: 9780231124966
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Consumer Behavior, HISTORY / United States / 20th Century
REVIEWS Icon
The author is savvy enough to conduct most of his research in the real world. This is the rare book project that forces the writer to shop on Rodeo Drive, leaf through Vanity Fair... and visit the most extravagant spots in Las Vegas.... [An] engaging addition to the growing field of Luxe Lit.
James B. Twitchell is professor of English at the University of Florida and the author of many books including Adcult USA, Lead Us Into Temptation, and 20 Ads That Shook the World.

1. Over the Top: Americans in the Lap of Luxury
2. The Social Construction of Luxury: A Taxonomy of Taste
3. Let's Go Shopping: The Streets of Material Dreams
4. Where Opuluxe Is Made and Who Makes It: LVMH and Condé Nast
5. How Luxury Becomes Necessity: The Work of Advertising
6. From Shirts to Tulips: A Musing on Luxury
7. Viva Las Vegas! A Strip of Luxury
8. Still Learning From Las Vegas: How Luxury Is Turning Religious
Conclusion A (Mild) Defense of Luxury