Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Excessive but not wasteful? Youth cultures of everyday waste (avoidance)

Collins, Rebecca
Citations
Altmetric:
Advisors
Editors
Other Contributors
EPub Date
Publication Date
2019-08-26
Submitted Date
Other Titles
Abstract
This article contributes to ongoing debates around the cultural production of waste by arguing for a clearer distinction between concepts of ‘waste’ and ‘excess’, and by suggesting the benefits of this distinction for tackling the perceived consumer-cultural waste ‘problem’. Drawing on recent qualitative research with UK adolescents I consider how a range of (youth/consumer) cultural drivers, social norms and moral imperatives shape young people’s everyday material consumption practices in ways that reflect (and produce) varied ways of (de/re-)valuing no-longer-wanted possessions. By exploring the cultural projects within which the young participants and their material possessions were engaged, and by identifying their aims in employing specific keeping and ridding practices, noteworthy differences between ‘waste’ and ‘excess’ materialise. I suggest that the drivers of the ‘excesses’ identified – characterised here in terms of ‘outgrowings’ and ‘hedging’ – highlight a set of distinctly cultural challenges to be met if the slippage of materials from ‘excess’ into ‘waste’ is to be averted. I contend that acknowledging these challenges, and these conceptual distinctions, may prove beneficial in attempts to address some of the societal challenges (e.g. material novelty as a driver of social status) related to the production of waste.
Citation
Collins, R. (2019). Excessive but not wasteful? Youth cultures of everyday waste (avoidance). cultural geographies, 27(2), 293-305. https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474019871637
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Journal
cultural geographies
Research Unit
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Type
Article
Language
en
Description
Series/Report no.
ISSN
1474-4740
EISSN
1477-0881
ISBN
ISMN
Gov't Doc
Test Link
Sponsors
Embedded videos