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Original Articles

Nothing to be had ‘off the peg’: consumption, identity and the immobilization of young disabled people

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Pages 3-17 | Published online: 01 Oct 2010
 

Abstract

Contemporary sociology makes the case that the concepts of society and social structure are past their sell‐by dates. Our world is marked by impermanence and social life is characterised by mobilities. Even self‐identity has become liquid. Social actors use consumption artefacts and services to re‐design themselves in ways that are commensurate with their deepest desires. However, we argue that disabled people are unlikely to recognise themselves in these debates. Young disabled people, in their quest for identity and consumer citizenship, meet with ubiquitous barriers and closed markets. In their experience choice and mobility are rhetorical. They encounter immobilization and exclusion from the kinds of consumer lifestyles that their non‐disabled peers take for granted. Furthermore, we argue, that at the heart of consumer culture is an aesthetic of youthfulness that is profoundly alien to ‘the anomaly’. The signifiers of ‘youth’ and disability are in profound tension. Cultures of consumption are constituted in ways that mark young disabled people off as outsiders who need not apply for entry.

Notes

* Corresponding author. Glasgow Caledonian University, School of Social Science, City Campus, Cancaddens Road, Glasgow G4 OBA, UK. Email: [email protected]

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Bill Hughes Footnote*

* Corresponding author. Glasgow Caledonian University, School of Social Science, City Campus, Cancaddens Road, Glasgow G4 OBA, UK. Email: [email protected]

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