How did luxury become a necessity?
Dr Se谩n Williams provides an insight into the surprising story of luxury and what it means for us today.
Everyone has an opinion on what luxury means to them. For some, it鈥檚 being able to have the most expensive champagne whenever they want and for others it鈥檚 a lavish holiday four times a year. The general consensus is that wealth equals luxury, but is that actually the case? To coincide with his BBC Radio 3 Documentary, , and guest feature in , Dr Se谩n Williams provides an insight into the surprising story of luxury and what it means for us today.
Se谩n, a lecturer in the School of Languages and Cultures at the University of 葫芦影业, has been attempting to understand the contentious nature of luxury which began, in the modern sense, in the consumer revolution of the 18th century. His starting point is the historians鈥 consensus that, despite there being no significant rise in European wages across the 1700s, there was a significant increase in household purchases of high value goods like coffee and watches.
鈥淧rior to the 18th century there were periods and sectors where luxury goods were prevalent,鈥 Se谩n explains. 鈥淏ut the startling thing about luxury in the 18th century was that a rapidly growing market across Europe occurred alongside the intellectual revolution of the Enlightenment. Luxury was justified as an economic and social asset.鈥
Luxury became a necessity. It created jobs. No longer exclusively representing status and power such as the monarchy, instead it became part of the mass market. And that saw an explosion in self-expression and pleasure for everyone from labourers to servants. Se谩n mentions eighteenth century economist Adam Smith鈥檚 example of the tweezer box being a prized possession to many. 鈥淟uxury was seen as a liberal force,鈥 Se谩n highlights. And that force had both economical and personal drivers.
The average worker in the 18th century bought luxury goods - like watches and showy clothes - that were incredibly expensive, even though their salary hadn鈥檛 increased much, if at all. 鈥淭hey would buy a single conspicuous item, investing a lot of imagination and symbolism into it,鈥 Se谩n says. At the start of the seventeen hundreds, French servants spent around 10% of their earnings on clothes. By the 1780s, these domestic staff splurged a third of their wages on clothing.
Many of those historical behaviours are still happening today. The luxury market still provides jobs and allows for pleasure and self-expression. But it鈥檚 also informing the economic and social picture of high street shopping. In general, brands catering for consumers at the extreme ends of the economic spectrum are having continued success, but mid range high street brands are struggling. This is because 鈥渢he rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer," says Se谩n, and this supports the stabilisation of companies at either end of the spectrum. However, 鈥渨hat鈥檚 not true is that only poor people shop in Sports Direct and only rich people shop in Harrods.鈥
What鈥檚 apparent as Se谩n explains is that, in 2019, people with limited incomes are investing a disproportionate amount of income into luxury items, much like they did in the 18th century. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not simply the case that luxury is something you buy only when you can easily afford it. If you have nothing you won鈥檛 buy luxury items.鈥 Se谩n explains. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 also clear that today people are prepared to spend a disproportionate amount on luxury items that show how valuable they appear to be...鈥
Se谩n鈥檚 research emphasis on cultural responses, taken from literature and other media, highlights the importance here of individuals being able to invest symbolism and imagination into their luxury items. This is the same principle that was evident in the 18th century. Symbolism and imagination allows for self expression and gives an impression of opulence to the world which can produce feelings of empowerment and pride.
So perhaps luxury isn鈥檛 quite as synonymous with wealth after all. Instead it seems to be thriving on a culture of treating ourselves to the occasional luxury item. After all who doesn鈥檛 enjoy the odd glass of champagne or new watch?
- BBC Radio 3 Documentary:
- The Observer feature:
Relevant publications
Related studies
Se谩n teaches the German Enlightenment and Romanticism, Thomas Mann, and contemporary Swiss literature. His own module is "The Birth of Consumerism: Britain and Germany".
Se谩n is available for postgraduate supervision.
Media work
Research profiles
European everyday life around 1800