<p>This book critically approaches contemporary meanings of materiality and discuses ways in which we understand, experience, and engage with objects through popular culture in our private, social and professional lives. Appropriating Arjun Appadurai’s famous phrase: "the social life of things", with which he inspired scholars to take material culture more seriously and, as a result, treat it as an important and revealing area of cultural studies, the book explores the relationship between material culture and popular practices, and points to the impact they have exerted on our co-existence with material worlds in the conditions of late modernity.</p> <p>Introduction: The Popular Life of Things </p><p>[Anna Malinowska and Karolina Lebek]</p><p>Part 1: Theorizing <i>the Popular</i> and <i>the Material</i> </p><p>1. Culture: The ‘Popular’ and the ‘Material’ </p><p>[John Storey]</p><p>2. Cultural Materialisms and Popular Processes of Late Modernity </p><p>[Anna Malinowska] </p><p>3. The Secret Life of Things: Speculative Realism and the Autonomous Object </p><p>[Grzegorz Czemiel] </p><p>Part 2: From Material Media to Digital Materiality </p><p>4. The Representation of Book Culture in <i>ItNarratives</i> </p><p>[Joanna Maciulewicz] </p><p>5. The Intimacy of Writing – Lost in a Digital Age? </p><p>[Mayannah N. Dahlheim] </p><p>6. Popular Digital Imaging: Photoshop as Middlebroware </p><p>[Frédérik Lesage] </p><p>7. When You Are Not What You Do Not Have: Some Remarks on Digital Inheritance </p><p>[Marcin Sarnek] </p><p>Part 3: The Agency of Things and the Negotiation of Meaning </p><p>8. I See Faces: Popular <i>Pareidolia </i>and the Proliferation of Meaning </p><p>[Joanne Lee] </p><p>9. From Piss-Communication to GraffARTi: Hegemony, Popular Culture and the Bastard Art<i> </i></p><p>[David Walton] </p><p>10. From Performance to Objects and Back: London’s <i>Inter-ion </i></p><p>[Lucia Vodanovic] </p><p>11. Bohemian Bourgeoisie and Subversive Commodities </p><p>[Bartosz Stopel] </p><p>Part 4: Popular Narratives and Material Culture </p><p>12. Objects Don’t Lie: The Truth and the Things in Detective Stories</p><p>[Joanna Soćko] </p><p>13. Emotional Territories: An Exploration of Wes Anderson’s C<i>inemaps </i></p><p>[Nicolas Llano Linares] </p><p>14. The Poetics of Objects in <i>True Detective </i></p><p>[Karolina Lebek] </p><p>15. Mapping the Daytime Landscape: World-Building on US Soap Opera </p><p>[C. Lee Harrington and Byron Miller] </p><p>Part 5: Material Culture and the Creative Self </p><p>16. In Reverse: Declining Automobility and the Accidents of Progress </p><p>[Marcin Mazurek] </p><p>17. Living Dolls – A Food Studies Perspective </p><p>[Nina Augustynowicz] </p><p>18. Contemporary Toys, Adults and Creative Material Culture: from <i>Wow</i> to <i>Flow</i> to<i> Glow</i> </p><p>[Katriina Heliakka] </p><p>19. From Stuff to Material Civilization – Towards a Materiality of Childhood </p><p>[David James]</p>
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