Interest in processes of consumption and their influence has developed strongly in geographyover the last twenty years or so, partly through the raised levels of awareness of culturallyinformed understandings of geographical patterns that have arisen from the so-called‘cultural turn’, but also as a reflection of a wider realisation that in the contemporary world, ‘an understanding of the processes of consumption is central to debates about therelationship between society and space’ (Jackson and Thrift, 1995: 204). If, as it is generallyasserted, we have progressed (or are progressing) from a modernist-industrial to a postindustrial/postmodern basis to life – with an associated shift from production to consumptionas an organisational logic of economic and social space – the influence of consumptioncannot be ignored
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