Promise and trouble, desire and critique : shopping as a site of learning about globalization, identity and the potential for change

Adult educators talk frequently about learning which occurs during daily living; however, relatively few explore the breadth and depth of such learning. I contend that shopping, as it is commonly understood and practiced in Western societies, is a site of everyday learning. Among people concerned ab...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jubas, Kaela
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2813
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-2813
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-28132018-01-05T17:23:05Z Promise and trouble, desire and critique : shopping as a site of learning about globalization, identity and the potential for change Jubas, Kaela Informal adult learning Critical cultural studies Consumption Globalization Women's studies Bricolage Adult educators talk frequently about learning which occurs during daily living; however, relatively few explore the breadth and depth of such learning. I contend that shopping, as it is commonly understood and practiced in Western societies, is a site of everyday learning. Among people concerned about globalisation, this learning connects shopping to the politics of consumption, identity and resistance. Central to this inquiry are Antonio Gramsci's (1971) concepts of hegemony, ideology, common sense and dialectic. These are useful in understanding the irresolvable tensions between the political, economic and cultural arenas of social life. Informed by critical, feminist and critical race scholarship, I proceed to conceptualize adult learning as “incidental” (Foley, 1999, 2001) and holistic. I then conceptualize “consumer-citizenship.” Social relations of gender, race and class are central in the construction of identity which influences experiences and understandings of consumption and citizenship in the context of Canadian society and global development. My over-arching methodology, which I call “case study bricolage,” incorporates qualitative case study methods of interviews, focus groups and participant observation with 32 self-identified “radical shoppers” in Vancouver, British Columbia. As well, I employ cultural studies' intertextuality, and include an analysis of popular fiction to further expose discourses of shopping, consumption and consumerism. Drawing on Laurel Richardson's (2000) “crystallization,” I use various analytical “facets” to respond to three questions about shopping-as-learning: What do participants learn to do? Who do participants learn to be? How do participants learn to make change? Critical media literacy theory illuminates the function of popular culture in constructing a discursive web which shoppers navigate. Through shopping, participants learn how to learn and to conduct research, and how to develop a shopping-related values system, literacy and geography. Benedict Anderson's (1991) concept of “imagined community” helps explicate how participants' affiliations with shopping-related movements provide a sense of purpose and belonging. Finally, Jo Littler's (2005) notions of “narcissistic” and “relational” reflexivity clarify that different processes of reflexivity lead to different perspectives on societal change. This inquiry has implications for research and theorizing in adult learning, and the practice of critical adult education. Education, Faculty of Educational Studies (EDST), Department of Graduate 2008-11-25T20:58:55Z 2008-11-25T20:58:55Z 2008 2009-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2813 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 10340087 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Informal adult learning
Critical cultural studies
Consumption
Globalization
Women's studies
Bricolage
spellingShingle Informal adult learning
Critical cultural studies
Consumption
Globalization
Women's studies
Bricolage
Jubas, Kaela
Promise and trouble, desire and critique : shopping as a site of learning about globalization, identity and the potential for change
description Adult educators talk frequently about learning which occurs during daily living; however, relatively few explore the breadth and depth of such learning. I contend that shopping, as it is commonly understood and practiced in Western societies, is a site of everyday learning. Among people concerned about globalisation, this learning connects shopping to the politics of consumption, identity and resistance. Central to this inquiry are Antonio Gramsci's (1971) concepts of hegemony, ideology, common sense and dialectic. These are useful in understanding the irresolvable tensions between the political, economic and cultural arenas of social life. Informed by critical, feminist and critical race scholarship, I proceed to conceptualize adult learning as “incidental” (Foley, 1999, 2001) and holistic. I then conceptualize “consumer-citizenship.” Social relations of gender, race and class are central in the construction of identity which influences experiences and understandings of consumption and citizenship in the context of Canadian society and global development. My over-arching methodology, which I call “case study bricolage,” incorporates qualitative case study methods of interviews, focus groups and participant observation with 32 self-identified “radical shoppers” in Vancouver, British Columbia. As well, I employ cultural studies' intertextuality, and include an analysis of popular fiction to further expose discourses of shopping, consumption and consumerism. Drawing on Laurel Richardson's (2000) “crystallization,” I use various analytical “facets” to respond to three questions about shopping-as-learning: What do participants learn to do? Who do participants learn to be? How do participants learn to make change? Critical media literacy theory illuminates the function of popular culture in constructing a discursive web which shoppers navigate. Through shopping, participants learn how to learn and to conduct research, and how to develop a shopping-related values system, literacy and geography. Benedict Anderson's (1991) concept of “imagined community” helps explicate how participants' affiliations with shopping-related movements provide a sense of purpose and belonging. Finally, Jo Littler's (2005) notions of “narcissistic” and “relational” reflexivity clarify that different processes of reflexivity lead to different perspectives on societal change. This inquiry has implications for research and theorizing in adult learning, and the practice of critical adult education. === Education, Faculty of === Educational Studies (EDST), Department of === Graduate
author Jubas, Kaela
author_facet Jubas, Kaela
author_sort Jubas, Kaela
title Promise and trouble, desire and critique : shopping as a site of learning about globalization, identity and the potential for change
title_short Promise and trouble, desire and critique : shopping as a site of learning about globalization, identity and the potential for change
title_full Promise and trouble, desire and critique : shopping as a site of learning about globalization, identity and the potential for change
title_fullStr Promise and trouble, desire and critique : shopping as a site of learning about globalization, identity and the potential for change
title_full_unstemmed Promise and trouble, desire and critique : shopping as a site of learning about globalization, identity and the potential for change
title_sort promise and trouble, desire and critique : shopping as a site of learning about globalization, identity and the potential for change
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2813
work_keys_str_mv AT jubaskaela promiseandtroubledesireandcritiqueshoppingasasiteoflearningaboutglobalizationidentityandthepotentialforchange
_version_ 1718581838845313024