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422 pages, Paperback
First published October 30, 1981
This book is a good example of ethnography in a broad sense: the authors begin with reviewing existing notions on the meaning of things, then dive into their own field study, comment/extrapolate on the results of the study, both qualitatively and quantitatively, then summarize with a sweeping chapter about the implications of the study.
It's clear at several points that the Chicago of 1977 is not the world of today, but that's ok: the study is in some ways an analysis of a distant, vanished tribe that can tell us some enduring things about various societies today.
Best of all, I found the book provocative in its analysis of what objects and transactions with objects mean, and how they gain those meanings. It also showed me a glimpse of the vast gulf between the world view of an engineer (a materialist in a formal sense) and that of an anthropologist.