TY - BOOK AU - Brückweh,Kerstin ED - German Historical Institute in London. TI - The voice of the citizen consumer: a history of market research, consumer movements, and the political public sphere T2 - Studies of the German Historical Institute London SN - 0199604029 AV - HF5415.2 .V58 2011 U1 - 658.83 22 PY - 2011/// CY - Oxford, New York, London PB - Oxford University Press, German Historical Institute KW - Marketing research KW - History KW - Consumer behavior KW - Political aspects N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Pt. 1. Introduction. Perspectives for a history of market research, consumer movements, and the political public sphere / Kerstin Brückweh -- pt. 2. Producing knowledge about citizens and consumers: market research and opinion polling. A radical past? the politics of market research in Britain, 1900-1950 / Stefan Schwarzkopf -- Between opinion and desire: Elle magazine's survey research in 1950s France / Judith G. Coffin -- Targeting and educating consumers in West Germany: market research by the Allensbach Institute up to the 1970s / Norbert Grube -- pt. 3. Acting on one's own initiative: consumer movements. Consumer activism: rights or duties? / Matthew Hilton -- Crosland's consumer politics / Lawrence Black -- Consumer groups with or without a state: the history of a misunderstanding in France, 1945-2006 / Alain Chatriot -- German co-ops in the public sphere, 1890-1968: a plea for a longer perspective / Michael Prinz -- pt. 4. Communicating knowledge: market research, data protection, and the political. Consumers, citizens, and deviants: differing forms of personal identification in England since the Victorian period / Edward Higgs -- Between global and local: the invention of data privacy in the United States and France / Gunnar Trumbull -- Citizen-consumers: hyphenation, identification, depoliticization? / John Clarke -- Cultures of products and political closures: looking for transfer performances / Rainer Gries -- pt. 5. Outlook: citizens and consumers in the twentieth century. Suggestions for further research / Heinz-Gerhard Haupt ER -