MignoloWalter D.WalshCatherine E.2018. On Decoloniality: Concepts, Analytics, Praxis. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
15.
MintzSidney W.1985. Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History. London: Penguin.
16.
ReckwitzAndreasRosaHartmut. 2023. Late Modernity in Crisis: Why We Need a Theory of Society. London: Polity Press.
17.
RobinsonCedric J.1983. Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition. London: Zed Press.
18.
SassatelliRoberta. 1997. “Consuming Ambivalence: Eighteenth-Century Public Discourse on Consumption and Mandeville's Legacy.”Journal of Material Culture2(3):339–60.
19.
SassatelliRoberta. 2007. Consumer Culture: History, Theory and Politics. London: Sage Publications.
20.
SassatelliRoberta. 2015a. “Consumer Culture, Sustainability, and a New Vision of Consumer Sovereignty.”Sociologia Ruralis55:483–96.
21.
SassatelliRoberta. 2015b. “Framing Humanity Consumerwise: Embodied Consumer Selves and their Varieties.” Pp. 177–96 in Being Human in a Consumer Society, edited by García MartínezA. N.Farnham, UK: Ashgate.
22.
SassatelliRobertaGhigiRossellaSemiGiovanni. 2025. “Enriching Sociology by Studying the Super-Rich.”Rassegna Italiana di Sociologia66(1):95–107.
23.
SassatelliRobertaWahlenStefanWelchDaniel. 2022. “Decolonising Consumption, the Hegemony of Consumer Culture, and the Politics of Consumption: An Interview with Roberta Sassatelli.”Consumption and Society1(1):216–30.
24.
TrentmannFrank. 2016. Empire of Things: How We Became a World of Consumers, from the Fifteenth Century to the Twenty-First. New York: Harper.
25.
WacquantLoïc. 2023. “The Trap of ‘Racial Capitalism.’”European Journal of Sociology64(2):153–62.