Daniel Miller (anthropologist)

Daniel Miller (anthropologist)

Daniel Miller (born 1954) is an anthropologist most closely associated with studies of our relationships to things and the consequences of consumption. His theoretical work was first developed in Material Culture and Mass Consumption and is summarized more recently in his book Stuff. This is concerned to transcend the usual dualism between subject and object and to study how social relations are created through consumption as an activity.

Contents

Education

Miller was originally trained in archaeology and anthropology at the University of Cambridge but has spent his entire professional life at the Department of Anthropology, University College London which has become a research center for the study of material culture and where more recently he established the world’s first program dedicated to the study of digital anthropology.

Anthropological Position

Miller criticises the concept of materialism which presumes our relationships to things are at the expense of our relationship to persons. He argues that most people are either enabled to form close relationships to both persons and objects or have difficulties with both.

With his students he has applied these ideas to many genres of material culture such as clothing, homes, media and the car, through research based on the methods of traditional anthropological ethnography in regions including the Caribbean, India and London. In the study of clothing, his work ranges from a book on the Sari in India to more recent research explaining the popularity of blue jeans and the way they exemplify the struggle to become ordinary. His initial work on the consequences of the internet for Trinidad was followed by studies of the impact of mobile phones on poverty in Jamaica and more recently the way Facebook has changed the nature of social relationships.

His work on material culture also includes ethnographic research on how people develop relationships of love and care through the acquisition of objects in shopping and how they deal with issues of separation and loss including death through their retention and divestment of objects. He argues that since we cannot control death as an event, we use our ability to control the gradual separation from the objects associated with the deceased as a way of dealing with loss. Complementary to this work on separation from things are three books about shopping, the most influential of which, A Theory of Shopping, looks at how the study of everyday purchases can be a route to understanding how love operates within the family. He has also carried out several projects on female domestic labour and being a mother, including studies of au pairs, and Filipina women in London and their relationship to their left behind children in the Philippines. Most of these projects are collaborations.

Works

  • 1984, (with C. Tilley). Eds. Ideology, Power and Prehistory.
  • 1985, Artefacts As Categories: A study of Ceramic Variability in Central India.
  • 1987, Material Culture and Mass Consumption.
  • 1989, with M. Rowlands and C. Tilley) Eds. Domination and Resistance.
  • 1993, Ed. Unwrapping Christmas.
  • 1994, Modernity - An Ethnographic Approach: Dualism and mass consumption in Trinidad.
  • 1995, Acknowledging Consumption.
  • 1995, Ed. Worlds Apart - Modernity Through the Prism of the Local.
  • 1997, Capitalism: an Ethnographic Approach.
  • 1998, A Theory of Shopping.
  • 1998, Ed. Material Cultures
  • 1998, (With J. Carrier) Virtualism: a New Political Economy.
  • 1998, (with P. Jackson B. Holbrook and N. Thrift) Shopping Place and Identity
  • 2000, (et al.) Commercial Cultures: Economies, Practices, Spaces.
  • 2001, (with D. Slater) The Internet: An Ethnographic Approach
  • 2001, The Dialectics of Shopping.
  • 2001, Ed. Car Cultures.
  • 2001, Ed. Consumption (four volumes)
  • 2001, Home Possessions: Material Cultures Behind Closed Doors.
  • 2003, (With M. Banerjee). The Sari.
  • 2005, (with Suzanne Küchler) Ed. Clothing as Material Culture.
  • 2005, Ed. Materiality.
  • 2006, (With H. Horst) The Cell Phone: An Anthropology of Communication.
  • 2008, The Comfort of Things.
  • 2009, Ed. Anthropology and the Individual.
  • 2010, Stuff.
  • 2010, (with Zuzana Búriková) Au Pair
  • 2011 (with Sophie Woodward) Eds. Global Denim
  • 2011 Tales from Facebook
  • In Press (with Mirca Madianou)Migration and New Media: Transnational families and polymedia
  • In Press (with Sophie Woodward) Blue Jeans - The art of ordinary


External links


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