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When stuff gets covered in fluff in order to build up a paradoxical existence
2012
Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology
Living immaterially in an over-materialized world seems to have become one of today's paradoxes. More and more often what can't be touched looks like getting greater "weight" than palpable things, commonly known as stuff. It seems that we are living in a "fluff-made world" as Richard Lanham, author of "The Economics of Attention" (2006) underlined in his study; a world he perceives as being mainly made up of information and visual representation. Even if we are dealing with everyday realities,
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