Product, Competence, Project and Practice

Studies of ordinary (as distinct from spectacular) forms of consumption have generated new questions and new ways of thinking about mechanisms and processes of change and about the conceptual status of consumer goods. No longer exclusively framed as semiotic resources deployed in the expression and reproduction of identities and social relations, products are increasingly viewed as essential ingredients in the effective accomplishment of everyday life. In this article, we examine the recursive relation between products, projects and practices with reference to do-it-yourself (DIY) and home improvement — an important area of craft consumption and a field in which consumers are actively and creatively engaged in integrating and transforming complex arrays of material goods. Interviews with DIY practitioners and retailers point to a circuit of interdependent relations between the hardware of consumption (tools, materials, etc.); distributions of competence (between humans and non-humans); the emergence of consumer projects and, with them, new patterns of demand. In elaborating on these practical and theoretical linkages we develop an analysis of the material dynamics of craft consumption that bridges approaches rooted in science studies, material culture and consumption.

[1]  Wiebe E. Bijker,et al.  Science in action : how to follow scientists and engineers through society , 1989 .

[2]  R. Belk,et al.  Culture and Consumption: New Approaches to the Symbolic Character of Consumer Goods and Activities , 1989 .

[3]  Grant Mccracken,et al.  New approaches to the symbolic character of consumer goods and activities , 1989 .

[4]  M. Featherstone Perspectives on Consumer Culture , 1990 .

[5]  S. Woolgar Configuring the User: The Case of Usability Trials , 1990 .

[6]  Donna Haraway,et al.  Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature , 1991 .

[7]  B. Latour We Have Never Been Modern , 1991 .

[8]  M. Mcneil Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature , 1992 .

[9]  Michel Callon,et al.  Agency and the Hybrid Collectif , 1995, Mathematics, Science, and Postclassical Theory.

[10]  L. Miller Family togetherness and the suburban ideal , 1995 .

[11]  T. Schatzki Social Practices: A Wittgensteinian Approach to Human Activity and the Social , 1996 .

[12]  Steven M. Gelber Do-It-Yourself: Constructing, Repairing and Maintaining Domestic Masculinity , 1997 .

[13]  Danny Miller,et al.  Consumption and Its Consequences , 2012 .

[14]  Danny Miller,et al.  A Theory of Shopping , 1999 .

[15]  Chris Roush Inside Home Depot: How One Company Revolutionized an Industry through the Relentless Pursuit of Growth , 1999 .

[16]  P. Kenhove,et al.  The impact of task definition on store-attribute saliences and store choice , 1999 .

[17]  J. Beatty The pro-am revolution , 2000 .

[18]  M. Michael Reconnecting Culture, Technology and Nature: From Society to Heterogeneity , 2000 .

[19]  Andreas Reckwitz Toward a Theory of Social Practices , 2002 .

[20]  Mike Kuniavsky,et al.  Observing the User Experience: A Practitioner's Guide to User Research (Morgan Kaufmann Series in Interactive Technologies) (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Interactive Technologies) , 2003 .

[21]  I. Woodward Divergent Narratives in the Imagining of the Home amongst Middle-Class Consumers , 2003 .

[22]  Sonali K. Shah,et al.  How Communities Support Innovative Activities: An Exploration of Assistance and Sharing Among End-Users , 2003 .

[23]  Tim Dant,et al.  Materiality and Society , 2004 .

[24]  C. Williams,et al.  A Lifestyle Choice? Evaluating the Motives of Do-it-Yourself (DIY) Consumers , 2004 .

[25]  M. Nelson How men matter: housework and self-provisioning among rural single-mother and married-couple families in Vermont, US , 2004 .

[26]  C. Campbell The Craft Consumer , 2005 .

[27]  A. Warde Consumption and Theories of Practice , 2005 .

[28]  E. Shove,et al.  Consumers, Producers and Practices , 2005 .

[29]  I. Woodward Investigating Consumption Anxiety Thesis: Aesthetic Choice, Narrativisation and Social Performance , 2006 .

[30]  Elizabeth Shove,et al.  On “The Design of Everyday Life” , 2007 .