| Professor Scott M Lash, Scott Lash John Urry, Professor John Urry - Social Science - 1993 - 376 pages
...Reflexivity is cultural, accumulation is economic. However, we use the term to enable us to capture how economic and symbolic processes are more than ever interlaced and interarticulated; that is, that the economy is increasingly culturally inflected and that culture is more and more economically... | |
| Vincent B. Leitch - Philosophy - 1996 - 228 pages
...detailed account of this phenomenon, see Scott Lash and John Urry, who argue that during postmodernity "economic and symbolic processes are more than ever interlaced and interarticulated; that is. that the economy is increasingly culturally inflected and that culture is more and more economically... | |
| Larry Ray, Andrew Sayer - Social Science - 1999 - 292 pages
...avoid continuing to use it, which Hall now seems to acknowledge (Hall, 1997). Similarly we accept that 'the economy is increasingly culturally inflected.... culture is more and more economically inflected' (Lash and Urry, 1994: 64). But despite the inflections, economic and cultural logics remain different... | |
| Alan Bryman - Business & Economics - 2004 - 212 pages
...economic and the culturaL Although the two spheres have always been linked, as Lash and Urry have argued: 'the economy is increasingly culturally inflected...the boundaries between the two become more and more blurred...'4" The former process is evident in the way in which commercial organizations draw on well-known... | |
| Paul du Gay - Business & Economics - 2007 - 210 pages
...make this argument is contained in Lash and Urry's Economies of Signs and Space. Here, it is argued that: Economic and symbolic processes are more than...in regard to one another as system and environment. (1994: 64) 138 'culturalized', Lash and Urry point to a number of developments. For "_ instance, they... | |
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