A European collaborator suggested this book, which details “the movement of concepts and commodities,” and characterizes “processes of mutual adaptation and adjustment” by investigating “what a container ship reveals about processes of globalization, standardization and circulation” (p.1). As a practice theorist, Shove takes “social practices as primary units of conceptualisation and investigation” (p.2). Although practice theorists “tend to work with relatively bounded cases and examples” (p.2), some have examined “evidently large social phenomena,” and this book is one example (p.3).
Shove has three reasons for writing the book. First, “it is impossible to understand significant social problems without understanding how patterns of relatedness take hold across the entire plenum of practice” (p.3). Second, she wants to demonstrate that “this book is first and foremost about how practices connect and how different types of connectivity evolve.” Third, she wants “to help embed practice theoretically compatible ways of thinking across the social sciences” (p.3). To get to these ambitions, she looks to Schatzki’s catalogue of events and processes that generate and fracture connections (pp.4-5), focusing on some of these: infusing, circulation, merging & emerging, cross-referencing, interweaving, accumulation, and division (p.5).
Chapter 3 focuses on circulating, examining how shipping containers facilitate circulating goods around the world. She argues that “theories of practice are important not because they add detail and colour to generic explanations but because they conceptualise trade and economic life in significantly different terms” (p.27).
Chapter 4 focuses on merging and emerging: “how previously established conventions and interpretations merge and change as practices take hold in different settings” (p.43). Of interest to me is her overview of Mazmanian’s and Duchenaut and Bellotti’s work on email:
Rather than treating email as an innovation that arrives and that is or is not taken up, these analyses view the changing place of email as something that reflects and that is market by a series of related transformation in the spatial and temporal boundaries of the working environment, and in the.nature of office work itself. The notion of hybridisation, and of emailing as an always changing blend of practices such as writing, communicating, organizing and managing, captures this aspect but does not, in itself, account for the scale of the phenomenon. (p.47)
I appreciated this discussion, but throughout this chapter and the book, I wanted more concrete examples and arguments. It may be that this ground is well-traveled, but Shove tends to skim above it.
Skipping to Chapter 6, Shove focuses on interweaving: “the ways in which material threads are woven through the plenum of practice” (p.73). She follows Ingold’s relational approach to (1) “recognize that the stats of any one material/object is not fixed” (p.73); (2) “distinguish between material connections as these develop over time … and synchronous forms of interaction” (p.74); and (3) “identify what seem to be repeating patterns in the material fabric of society, including those associated with the amplification of consumption and demand” (p.74).
Skipping again to Chapter 8, Shove focuses on dividing, arguing that “practice theory provides a novel and revealing account of inequalities as outcomes of differentiated and extended textures of advantage arising from forms of connectivity of the kind I have described” (p.108).
Overall, I liked this book. It taught me a lot about practice theory, and I appreciated how Shove scaled it up to address global flows. At the same time, I did definitely feel like someone from the outside looking in, trying to get below the surface to understand the details. I think I could understand the points much better if I were to read the sources that Shove centers throughout her chapters. Still, I recommend the book for practice theorists as well as others who are interested in sociomateriality or sociotechnical questions.