possessionism
English
editEtymology
editFrom possession + -ism.
Noun
editpossessionism (uncountable)
- The tendency to expand one's ownership of property without regard for its ethical implications
- 1995, M. D. Goulder, St. Paul Versus St. Peter: A Tale of Two Missions, page 119:
- The Pastorals are defending Pauline incarnational christology against Jewish Christian myths justifying possessionism
- 1998, Gary Gentile, The Lusitania Controversies: Atrocity of War and a Wreck-Diving History, page 222:
- Possessionism in wreck diving regard can be characterized generally as the compulsive collection of artifacts
- 2009, Manny Farber, Negative Space: Manny Farber on the Movies, page 370:
- They're always viewed in relation to American suburbanism, possessionism, commodityism, or copism.
- 2014, John Ernest, The Oxford Handbook of the African American Slave Narrative:
- […] racial theories and the unprecedented increase in colonial expansionism and territorial possessionism, as exemplified by Britain's “imperial century,” […]