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    <title type="text">Culture Making Articles items tagged crafting</title>
    <subtitle type="text">Culture Making Articles:Writing on Christianity and culture from Andy Crouch</subtitle>
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    <updated>2025-01-03T22:54:05Z</updated>
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    <entry>
      <title>What did you buy today?</title>
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      <published>2025-01-02T22:53:00Z</published>
      <updated>2025-01-03T22:54:05Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Andy Crouch</name>
            <email>andy@culture-making.com</email>
            
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					<b><p>Andy</p>: </b><em>?An intriguing and evocative more-or-less daily series by Portland artist (and art professor) Kate Bingaman-Burt about consumption. I like not only the way she cultivates awareness of what we buy, and why, but also the absence of the agitprop-style reflexive condemnation of consumerism that is the easy way out for so many residents of elite coastal cities. :) She documents purchases useful, delightful, and frivolous with wit and insight and the appropriate level of ambivalence about the purchasing life.?</em><br />
		
		<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/kateconsumption/3352998430/"><img src="http://www.culture-making.com/media/bingaman_420.jpg" alt="image" /></a><hr />
<div class="author" style="font-size: -1">from "<a href="http://www.obsessiveconsumption.typepad.com/">What Did you Buy Today?</a>," by Kate Bingaman-Burt, <a href="http://www.obsessiveconsumption.com/">Obsessive Consumption</a> 13 March 2009 :: thanks <a href="http://www.unomaha.edu/fineart/art/siedell.html">Daniel A. Siedell</a></div>		
	
			
			
			

		
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    </entry>    <entry>
      <title>The ultimate form of rebellion</title>
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      <id>tag:culture-makers.com,2025:author/1.1328</id>
      <published>2025-01-02T22:53:00Z</published>
      <updated>2025-01-03T22:54:05Z</updated>
      <author>
            <name>Andy Crouch</name>
            <email>andy@culture-making.com</email>
            
      </author>

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					<b><p>Andy</p>: </b><em>?Towards the end of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/1400063914/cmcom-20">Buying In</a>, Rob Walker looks at perhaps the most intriguing contemporary movement of resistance to consumerism: the DIY and crafts movement. I'll have some final thoughts tomorrow on how far this really goes in offering an alternative to the consumer culture, but there is something winsome and encouraging about people who have decided that they'd rather be creating culture than just consuming it.?</em><br />
		
		<div class="bookcover"><a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/1400063914/cmcom-20"><img src="http://culture-making.com/media/buyingin.png" /></a></div><p>To many participants, [crafting] is not a new shopping trend or even an art movement. It is a kind of consumption revolution, a community based on celebrating individual creativity and artisanal skill—and rejecting mass-produced goods. Like the brand underground entrepreneurs such as Barking Irons and the Hundreds, the DIY practitioners prized their independent, nonmainstream status. Crafters, however, often postioned their efforts as not just an alternative to or a luxurylike refinement of mass consumer culture, but an overt challenge to it.</p><p>“Crafting is a political statement,” Jean Railla, the founder of GetCrafty.com, argued in the first issue of a magazine called <i>Craft,</i> which appeared in late 2006. “With globalism, factory labor, and sweatshops as growing concerns, and giant chains like Starbucks, McDonald’s and Old Navy turning America into one big mini-mall, crafting becomes a protest.” Railla, whose 2004 book, <i>Get Crafty: Hip Home Ec,</i> placed self-made goods in the context of third wave feminism and a “bohemian” identity, returned in the new magazine’s second issue to argue on behalf of “the punk of craft.” Reiterating the political and “antiauthority” aspects of the “ethic of Do It Yourself,” she mused: “In the age of hypermaterialism, Paris Hilton, and thousand-dollar ‘It’ bags, perhaps making stuff is the ultimate form of rebellion.” . . . </p><p>[And yet . . . ] Grounded in commerce, the DIY movement not only accommodates consumption and even marketing, it depends on them. It’s not opposed to the meaning of objects, it’s <i>about</i> the meaning of objects.</p><hr />
<div class="author" style="font-size: -1">Rob Walker, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/1400063914/cmcom-20"><i>Buying In: The Secret Dialogue Between What We Buy and Who We Are</i></a>, p. 236–237, 241.</div>		
	
			
			
			

		
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