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    The Consumer Revolution Comes Home: Material Inequalities in London’s Eighteenth-Century Polite Society

    Stobart, Jon ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9771-4741, Blonde, Bruno and Spliet, Bas (2025) The Consumer Revolution Comes Home: Material Inequalities in London’s Eighteenth-Century Polite Society. Journal of Interdisciplinary History. ISSN 0022-1953 (In Press)

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    Abstract

    Urban spaces are often considered nurseries of consumer developments. Focusing on eighteenth-century London, the cradle of the famed ‘birth of a consumer society’, we employ newspaper advertisements of forthcoming auction sales to map changes in the domestic material culture of the city’s ‘polite society’. Over the course of the century, British-made products replaced Asian luxuries among the most distinct positional goods promoted in these advertisements, and new social distinctions emerged around objects related to leisure: gardening, music and domestic sociability and conviviality. Overall, however, narrowing consumer inequalities outweighed these renewed differentiations in the social distribution of positional goods, suggesting a convergence of domestic material culture between London’s elite and upper middling sorts.

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