consumptionsuch
Consumptionsuch is a term used in cultural sociology to denote consumption understood as a social practice rather than a private sequence of choices. It emphasizes how acts of consuming—what is bought, how it is used, and in what social or material contexts—participate in producing meaning, identity, and social relations. As a concept, consumptionsuch treats goods and services as symbols embedded in cultural codes, whose meanings are negotiated through everyday interaction, media representation, and institutional norms.
Origin and usage: The term is a neologism found in discussions of contemporary consumer culture and has
Key dimensions: Signaling and social distinction, drawing on ideas similar to conspicuous consumption and cultural capital;
Methods and examples: Researchers examine consumptionsuch through ethnography, interviews, discourse analysis, and media studies to reveal
Critiques: Critics note potential vagueness, overlap with established concepts in consumer culture, and challenges in operationalizing
See also: consumer culture, conspicuous consumption, materialism, identity, sustainability in consumerism.