Analysis Of Susan Strasser's Waste And Want: A Social History Of Trash

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Humankind produces and consumes with little regard for waste. Susan Strasser’s Waste and Want: A Social History of Trash focuses on consumption’s byproduct; trash and what humankind has done to dispose of their waste over the past decades. Strasser catalogues an often deemed unsophisticated part of our modern society as being “central to our lives yet generally silenced or ignore” (p.36), throughout her book elucidating on the premise that one’s own view and opinion of what is deemed as trash varies greatly from person to person. Strasser explicates to the reader the rise of mass markets across the world and the impacts that production and consumption have on the creation of trash. Strasser begins to follow the story of trash in the pre-colonial …show more content…

The idea of out of sight out of mind has transformed the American view of throwing raw materials in the garbage alongside the mass market which has caused a huge shift in the availability of goods in market. American production of goods is no longer centered around ensuring versatile adaptations for the product. Mass markets which boomed after the twentieth century have strayed focus to the creation of aesthetics versus application. Cities and households have both mutually shifted away from reusing products to the easy disposal into receptacles causing a rift worldwide in what should or shouldn’t be labeled as trash. Over the last 100 years opening the once closed production and consumption system has eliminated the need for manufacturers to tailor their products so households have the ability to reuse, and aesthetic packaging has taken a turn in replacing once-usable materials alongside the desired product. Strasser asserts that aspects which constituted the shifts in production methods follow the maturing industrialization which has swept the country in the last

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