Consumer holiday structure: An analysis of Christian holiday patterns and consumer ritual practice in America
by Cassell, Basil Rogers, A.M., UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI - KANSAS CITY, 2010, 87 pages; 1483860

Abstract:

This thesis explores the rituals that reinforce American capitalist consumerism, specifically focusing on the Christian holiday calendar structure. Major Christian holidays are viewed as complex sets and repeated patterns, involving inversions and binary oppositions. A structuralist analysis is applied to explore the role of Black Friday as a new consumer holiday in a larger symbol set—one that reveals the reinforcement of underlying values and practices of consumerism. The structural comparison of the meaning of Fat Tuesday and Ash Wednesday as the inauguration of Lent as a season of non-consumption is compared to Thanksgiving and Black Friday as the inauguration of a season of consumption and shopping during Advent. Seen from a structural viewpoint, new consumer holidays take prominence in practice, re-defining seasons in relation to consumption, that previously had been defined by civil religious structure and meaning. The re-definition of civil religion as consumer civil religion, and implications for related social theories are discussed.

 
AdviserJeffery Bennett
SchoolUNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI - KANSAS CITY
SourceMAI/ 49-03, p. , Jan 2011
Source TypeThesis
SubjectsReligion; American studies; Social structure
Publication Number1483860
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