2009
DOI: 10.1179/004049609x12504376351461
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Autobiographies and Menswear Consumption in Britain, c. 1880–1939

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Rather than viewing women as passive victims of an emerging consumer culture, Mercer paints a more optimistic picture of consumption as an entry point to political activism. Male consumers also receive some attention: Ugolini uses published autobiographies as a way of understanding men's sartorial consumption, while Bengry sees in Men Only , which began life in 1935, an attempt to court male homosexual consumers long before the ‘pink pound’ became widely targeted. Victorian commodity culture received some attention.…”
Section: (V) 1850–1945
Kate Bradley and James Taylor
University Of Kementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rather than viewing women as passive victims of an emerging consumer culture, Mercer paints a more optimistic picture of consumption as an entry point to political activism. Male consumers also receive some attention: Ugolini uses published autobiographies as a way of understanding men's sartorial consumption, while Bengry sees in Men Only , which began life in 1935, an attempt to court male homosexual consumers long before the ‘pink pound’ became widely targeted. Victorian commodity culture received some attention.…”
Section: (V) 1850–1945
Kate Bradley and James Taylor
University Of Kementioning
confidence: 99%