Escola Técnica Superior d'Arquitectura de Barcelona
Abstract
The practice of consumption is intrinsically integrated into our post-modern society and is fundamental in
exercising, defining and re-defining people and group identity. Consumption occurs somewhere and somewhen
it is a spatial activity, it is shaped by time and space. The site of this investigation, the touristic enclave of Little
India, appears to hold a “distinct” culture of consumption within Singapore and ephemeral spaces of
consumption that are continuously produced and re-produced everyday and every night seem to be essential for
the distinctive behavior of consumers. This case study analyzes the processes of production, de-production, reproduction
of the mentioned temporary spaces of consumption and their significance for a
multicultural/multiethnic society.Peer Reviewe