“…First, characteristics of luxury housing keep changing. Walters and Carr’s (2017) longitudinal study (1930–2000) of media representations of luxury in New Zealand’s second homes found that their foci changed from views and spaciousness to ‘distinction, individuality, quality, American styling’, treating conspicuous consumption as ‘anathema’ during recession times, subtle representations of privacy, and then to tasteful, smaller properties after the global financial crisis in 2007. Second, luxury housing advertising creates new localities, reinforces exclusivist housing aspirations, constitutes individual and group identities and shapes social differentiation (Cheng, 2001; Collins and Kearns, 2008; Pow and Kong, 2007; Searle, 2013).…”