Literature cited
- Alexander, Catherine and Joshua Reno (2012a). Introduction. In C. Alexander and J. Reno (Eds.). Economies of recycling: The global transformation of materials, values and social relations (pp. 1–32). London: Zed Books.
- Alexander, Catherine and Joshua Reno (Eds.). (2012b). Economies of recycling: The global transformation of materials, values and social relations. London: Zed Books.
- Appadurai, Arjun (Ed.). (1986). The social life of things: commodities in cultural perspective. Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press.
- Appelgren, Staffan and Anna Bohlin (eds.). Circulating stuff through second-hand, vintage and retro markets. Theme issue. Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research, Vol. 57, Issue 1, (2015).
- Besnier, Niko (2004). “Consumption and Cosmopolitanism: Practicing modernity at the second-hand marketplace in Nuku’alofa, Tonga,” Anthropological Quarterly, 77: 7–45.
- Beuving, Joost (2015). American cars in Cotonou: Culture in African entrepreneurship and the making of a globalizing trade. Journal of Modern African Studies, 53(3): 317–338.
- Blomsma, Fenna and Geraldine Brennan (2017). “The Emergence of Circular Economy: A New Framing Around Prolonging Resource Productivity,” Journal of Industrial Ecology 21 (3): 603–614.
- Blonde, Bruno, Cocquery, Natacha, Stobart, Jon, and Ilja Van Damme (Eds.). (2009). Fashioning old and new: Changing consumer patterns in Europe (seventeenth-nineteenth centuries). Studies in European Urban History (1100–1800), 18. Turnhout: Brepols.
- Breen, T.H., The marketplace of revolution: How consumer politics shaped American independence, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004).
- Brooks, Andrew (2015). Clothing poverty: The hidden world of fast fashion and second-hand clothes. London: Zed Books.
- Brooks, Andrew and David Simon (2012). Unravelling the relationship between used-clothing imports and the decline of African clothing industries. Development and Change, 43(6): 1265–1290.
- Crang, Mike, Alex Hughes, Nicky Gregson, Lucy Norris and Farid Ahamad (2013). Rethinking governance and value in commodity chains through global recycling networks. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 38: 12–24.
- Crawford, Margaret. “The Garage Sale as Informal Economy and Transformative Urbanism,” in The Informed American City: Beyond Taco Trucks and Day Labor, ed. Vinit Mukhija and Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2014), 21–38.
- Cline, Elizabeth L. (2013). Overdressed: The shockingly high cost of cheap fashion. New York NY: Penguin.
- Cohen, Joanna, “‘The Right to Purchase Is as Free as the Right to Sell’: Defining Consumers as Citizens in the Auction-House Conflicts of the Early Republic,” Journal of the Early Republic, (20, no. 1, 2010), 25–62.
- Desrochers, Pierre (2000). “Market Processes and the Closing of ‘Industrial Loops,’—A Historical Reappraisal,” Journal of Industrial Ecology 4(1): 29–43.
- Douglas, Mary (1966). Purity and danger: An Analysis of the concepts of pollution and taboo. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
- Eriksen, Thomas H. and Elisabeth Schober (2017). Waste and the superfluous: An introduction. Social Anthropology, 25(3): 288–287.
- Fletcher, Kate (2014). Sustainable fashion and textiles: design journeys. London: Routledge.
- Fontaine, Laurence (Ed.). (2008). Alternative exchanges: Secondhand circulations from the sixteenth century to the present. New York: Berghahn Books.
- Gauthier, Melissa (2012). Mexican” ant traders” in the El Paso/Cuidad Juarez border region. In Globalization from Below: The World’s Other Economy, eds. Gordon Matthews, Gustavo Lins Ribeiro, and Carlos Alba Vega (New York: Routledge), 138–153.
- Gregson, Nicky and Louise Crewe (2003). Second-hand cultures. Oxford: Berg.
- Gregson, Nicky and Louise Crewe “The Bargain, the Knowledge and the Spectacle: Making Sense of Consumption in the Space of the Car Boot Salem: Environment and Planning D: Society and Space (Vol. 15 (1997): 87–112.
- Gregson, Nicky and Mike Crang (2015): From waste to resource: The trade in wastes and global recycling economies. Annual Review of Environment and Resources, 40: 151–176.
- Hansen, Karen Tranberg (2000). Salaula: The world of secondhand clothing and Zambia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Hansen, Karen Tranberg (2004). Helping or hindering? Controversies around the international second-hand clothing trade. Anthropology Today, 20(4): 3–9.
- Jenss, Heike (2015). Fashioning memory: Vintage style and youth culture. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
- Lemire, Beverly (1988). Consumerism in preindustrial and early industrial England: The trade in secondhand clothes. Journal of British Studies, 27(1): 1–24.
- Lemire, Beverly (1997). Dress, culture, and commerce: The English clothing trade before the factory, 1600–1800. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
- Lemire, Beverly (2005). Shifting currency: The culture and economy of the second hand trade in England, c. 1600–1850. In A. Palmer and H. Clark (Eds.), Old clothes, new looks: second hand fashion (pp. 49–82). New York: Berg.
- Le Zotte, Jennifer (2013). ‘Not charity, but a chance’: Philanthropic capitalism and the rise of American thrift stores. New England Quarterly, 86 (1): 169–195.
- Le Zotte, Jennifer (2017). From goodwill to grunge: A history of secondhand styles and alternative economies. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.
- McRobbie, Angela (1988). Second-hand dresses and the role of the ragmarket, in Zoot suits and second-hand dresses: An anthology of fashion and music, ed. Angela McRobbie (pp. 23–49). Boston: Unwin Hyman.
- Mendelsohn, Adam D. (2015). The rag race: How Jews sewed their way to success in America and the British empire. New York: New York University Press.
- Millgram, B. Lynne (2008). “Activating frontier livelihoods: Women and the transnational secondhand clothing trade between Hong Kong and the Philippines,” Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development, 37(1): 5–47.
- Nguyen, Minh T. N. (2016). Trading broken things: gendered performance and spatial practices in a northern Vietnam rural-urban waste economy. American Ethnologist, 43(1): 116–129.
- Norris, Lucy (2010). Recycling Indian clothing: Global contexts of reuse and value. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
- Palmer, Alexandra and Hazel Clark (Eds.). (2005). Old clothes, new looks: second hand fashion. Oxford: Berg.
- Reno, Joshua (2015). Waste and waste management. Annual Review of Anthropology, 44: 557–572.
- Samson, Melanie (2015). Accumulation by dispossession and the informal economy–Struggles over knowledge, being and work at a Soweto garbage dump. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 33(5): 813–830.
- Samuel, Raphael, Theaters of memory: Past and present in contemporary culture (London: Verso, 2012).
- Stobart, Jon and Ilja Van Damme, (Eds). Modernity and the second-hand trade. Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2010.
- Stokes, Raymond; Roman Köster; and Stephen C. Sambrook, eds., The Business of Waste: Great Britain and Germany, 1945 to the Present (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013).
- Strasser, Susan (1999). Waste and want: A social history of trash. New York: Henry Holt and Company.
- Thompson, Michael (1979). Rubbish theory: The creation and destruction of value. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Turner, Terence ([1980] 1993). The social skin. In C. B. Burroughs and J. Ehrenreich (Eds.). Reading the Social Body, pp. 15–39. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press.
- Kathryn Watt and Bernhard Dubbeld, “Enchanting the Worn-Out: The Craft of Selling Second-Hand Things at Milnerton Market, Cape Town,” Social Dynamics, vol. 42 (2016): 143–160.
- Wilson, Elizabeth (2005). Adorned in dreams: Fashion and modernity. Berkeley and Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press.
- Woloson, Wendy (2009). In hock: Pawning in America from independence through the great depression. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
- Zimring, Carl. Cash for your trash: Scrap recycling in America (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2000.
- Zimring, Carl “Dirty work: How hygiene and xenophobia marginalized the American waster trades, 1870–1930,” Environmental History 9, no 1 (2004): 80–101.