Buying Happiness
The Emergence of Consumer Consciousness in English Canada
9780774835138
Distributed for University of British Columbia Press
Buying Happiness
The Emergence of Consumer Consciousness in English Canada
The idea of Canada as a consumer society was largely absent before 1890 but familiar by the mid-1960s. This change required more than rising incomes and greater impulses to buy; it involved the creation of new concepts. Buying Happiness explores the ways that key public thinkers represented, conceptualized, and institutionalized new ideas about consumption. Liverant’s fresh approach connects the emergence and diffusion of these ideas with changes in political processes and social policy. As the figure of “the consumer” moved from the margins to the centre of social, cultural, and political analysis, the values and concepts associated with consumerism were woven into the Canadian social imagination.

Table of Contents
Introduction
1 The Meaning Is in the Spending
2 The Promise of a More Abundant Life
3 Culturing Canadian Patriotism
4 Moralizing the Economy
5 Charting the Contours of Modern Society
6 Regulating the Consumer
7 Buying Happiness
8 Academic Encounters
Conclusion
Notes; Index
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