Things make us just as much as we make things. And yet, unlike the study
of languages or places, there is no discipline devoted to the study of
material things. This book shows why it is time to acknowledge and
confront this neglect and how much we can learn from focusing our
attention on stuff.
The book opens with a critique of the concept of superficiality as
applied to clothing. It presents the theories that are required to
understand the way we are created by material as well as social
relations. It takes us inside the very private worlds of our home
possessions and our processes of accommodating. It considers issues of
materiality in relation to the media, as well as the implications of
such an approach in relation, for example, to poverty. Finally, the book
considers objects which we use to define what it is to be alive and how
we use objects to cope with death.
Based on more than thirty years of research in the Caribbean, India,
London and elsewhere, Stuff is nothing less than a manifesto for the
study of material culture and a new way of looking at the objects that
surround us and make up so much of our social and personal life.