Title: Capitalism and Consumer Society
1Capitalism and Consumer Society
2Sociology of Consumption
- Requires a critical analysis of the relationship
between capitalism and consumption. - Marxs Critique of Capitalism
3Marxs Analysis Presumes
- A Dialectical Approach to Historical Events
- Mounting Contradictions undermine systems leading
to social change. - Capitalism is a necessary phase
- specific historic conditions generate a limited
set of futures
4Industrial Capitalism 1820
- The capitalism discussed in the work of Marx is
fairly brutal.
5- Workhouse boys who have lost limbs in factory
work. In many cases, repetitive use injuries
lead to amputations. -
6Miner- late 1800s.
7Improvements
- Life expectancy in 1900 was 49 years, whereas
today it is 77. - Sanitation
- Medicine
- Social Justice
- Legal Protections
8The Development of Consumer Culture
- From Feudalism to Capitalism
- Expansion of World Trade after the Colonization
of the Americas, parts of Africa leads to
increased economic expansion- 1600-1800. - Increase in currency, goods, and workers in
circulation - Industrial Capitalism- 1820- 1980s
- From Capitalism to Post-Industrial Capitalism
- Information/Entertainment as an inexhaustible non
utilitarian good. - 1980s on
9From Loyal Subjects to Producers
- Key Changes
- From Feudalism to Democracy
- Rise of Individualism
- Increasing rationalization
- Changes in work and family life
- Urbanization
10Understanding the Shift- Trade and the Growing
Middle Class
- Between 1600 and 1800 expanding world trade in
wood and textiles was undermining Feudal
sharecropping systems. - New opportunities for wealth for small
businesspeople expanded the middle class and
shifted political relations of power.
11The Peasants/Serfs
- Rural peasants witnessed the erosion of land
grant rights as their labor in textile production
became more valuable than their labor in
agricultural production. As peasants were
evicted from rural areas, they migrated to urban
centers offering work in textile production.
12The Peasants/Serfs
- Rural peasants witnessed the erosion of land
grant rights as their labor in textile production
became more valuable than their labor in
agricultural production. As peasants were
evicted from rural areas, they migrated to urban
centers offering work in textile production.
13New Social Relations are Created
- A growing middle class, industrialists and
workers are new social roles. Aristocratic
systems based on paternal responsibility in
exchange for loyalty are becoming obsolete. - Individual rights and social mobility are
emerging in ideologies.
14Marxs Critique of Capitalism
- The fundamental contradictions of capitalism will
eventually lead to its destruction. - Capitalism creates vast inequities in wealth and
incredible abuses.
15Understanding Modes of Production
- Mode of Production- Two elements
- 1) Forces of production- physical arrangement of
economic activity - 2)Social relations of production- indispensable
human attachments that people must form to carry
out this economic activity. - Mode of production is the superstructure on which
legal and political life and forms of
consciousness rest. - Changes in the mode of production produce changes
in the relations of production.
16Commodities
- Are products of labor intended for both use and
exchange. - People produce what they need to survive.
- Commodities are the reified result of labor.
17The Fetishism of Commodities
- Labor gives commodities their value. The
fetishism of commodities involves the process by
which actors fail to recognize that it is their
labor that gives commodities their value. - A commodity is therefore a mysterious thing,
simply because in it the social character of
mens labor appears to them as an objective
character stamped upon the product of that labor
because the relations of the producers to the sum
total of their own labor is presented to them as
a social relation, existing not between
themselves, but between the products of their
labor. Marx, 1867
18Value
- For Marx, the main function of capitalism is the
production of value, rather than goods. - Value Total Amount of Labor time expended in
the production of a given commodity.
19Value and Commodity Exchange
- Value is the common denominator among all
commodities. - The types of goods produced by capitalists are
immaterial to them, the production of value is
what is key.
20Types of Value
- Use Value- for what something can be used.
- Exchange Value- for what something can be traded.
- Surplus Value- the difference between the input
costs of producing an item and what it can be
exchanged for. Surplus value is produced by
paying labor a wage that is less than the value
produced by that labor. - By maximizing the amount of time an individual
works, the capitalist can maximize the rate of
surplus value.
21Production of Commodities and Surplus Value
- Labor creates value.
- All other inputs bring only the amount of value
already embedded in them. - What are ways that more value can be obtained
from workers? - Longer hours
- Faster production
- Fewer benefits
22The Fetishism of Commodities
- Commodities must fulfill a social need as well as
the manifold needs of the individual. - The Creation of Need in Consumer Society is a key
shift.
23So Wheres the Revolution?
- Post-Industrial Capitalism
- Is it still coming?- only when globalization is
complete and the international workers of the
world unite, can there be a revolution. - Is it outside the realm of the fathomable? The
changes remain as of yet inconceivable/
24From Producers to Consumers
- Since the 1950s, mass consumption has
proliferated.
25The Making of the Consumer
- How does a culture encourage people to behave in
some ways and not others? - In 1870, 53 of the population lived and worked
on farms and produced much of what they consumed. - How much of what we consume do we produce?
26Creating Consumers
- Changes in the Display of Goods
- Development of Department Stores- one might go
just to look - Goods were presented in ways designed to make
consumers want to buy them. - It also acted as a primer- telling people how to
decorate and dress.
27Creating Consumers
- Advertising
- The goal of advertising is to create desire.
- In 1880 30 Million was invested in advertising.
In 1998, 437 billion was spent on advertising.
28Creating Consumers
- The growth of a lifestyle of consumption.
- Mass media demonstrates how to be a proper
consumer. - Stars became models for social behavior.
29Culture Industry
- Reception becomes dictated by exchange value as
the higher purposes and values of culture succumb
to the logic of the production process and the
market. (Featherstone, 1991)
30The Transforming of Institutions
- Educational institutions developed fields like
accounting to facilitate mass consumption. - Synergistic relationship between knowledge and
culture industries. Ie. Museums and designers
consult with each other. - Governmental Organizations- Commerce Department
etc.
31Reading the Signs
- Consumption entails the active manipulation of
signs. - The sign and commodity come together to produce
the commodity-sign. (Baudrillard, 1970).
32Demand is Socially Constructed
- Key Question Is demand imposed from above upon
consumers, or does it come from consumers? - Both- but understanding the complicated
relationships between consumer taste/demands and
social structural forces remains a challenge.
33- The consumer is expected to assume responsibility
for appearance, failing to do so becomes a sign
of a host of failures. - This reinforces social status especially class
stratification.
34The Commodification of Leisure Time
- Industrial production requires exponential growth
in consumption. Recreation and leisure becomes
an important forum in which this can occur.
35The Commodification of Otherness
- bell hooks- there is pleasure to be found in
the acknowledgement and enjoyment of racial
difference. p. 343