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A culture based on consumption

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Forty-nine times for telephone lines, One hundred forty five times for cars, and ... Peer evaluation based on physical appearance, branded clothes, etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A culture based on consumption


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A culture based on consumption
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Consumption culture
  • David Potter has called modern American
    advertising the institution of abundance
  • He states, It dominates the media, it has vast
    power in the shaping of popular standards, and it
    is really one of the very limited group of
    institutions which exercise social control.

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Americans and the consumption of natural resources
  • US residents consume at a level unprecedented in
    human history
  • Living at a level reserved for the rich in the
    past
  • Mass prosperity
  • Huge levels of waste

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  • The United Nations Development Programmes (UNDP)
    Human Development Report 1998 (HDR 1998) provides
    some of the most striking statistics
  • The ratios of consumption levels of 20 percent of
    the people who live in the richest countries to
    the 20 percent who live in the poorest countries
    are 
  • Eleven times for meat,
  • Seventeen times for energy,
  • Seven times for fish,
  • Forty-nine times for telephone lines,
  • One hundred forty five times for cars, and 
  • Sixteen times in the overall.

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What are the outcomes?
  • Huge waste
  • Garbage
  • Pollution
  • Resource depletion
  • Domestic unrest
  • International conflict
  • Happiness? (high standard of living)
  • Worldly population
  • Investment in consumables rather than capital

7
Features of materialism
  • Desire to own things that does not reflect actual
    need (wants)
  • Dissatisfaction with ones current material
    conditions
  • Jealousy toward those with greater levels of
    material wealth
  • Willingness to exchange non-material values for
    material values
  • Evaluation of others based on their material
    wealth

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Where does materialism come from?
  • Nature?
  • Is it natural to want more than you need?
  • Nurture?
  • If so, what in the culture leads to a materialist
    attitude?

9
Themes of advertising
  • You are inadequate
  • Products exist to make you better
  • You will be admired for owning something
  • Commodities can make you happy
  • They solve your problems
  • They make up for your inadequacies
  • Consumption is a competition
  • Whoever has the most stuff when he dies, wins

10
Export of consumption ideology
  • Countries that are receiving Western media images
    and advertising experience an increase in
    wasteful consumption
  • Revolution of rising expectations
  • Even in poor countries, the population expects
    greater levels of consumer goods, lifestyle
    improvement
  • May contribute to Third World instability

11
Center for Sustainable Production and
Consumption,1999)  
  • Advertising, though not targeted  as  such,  does
    influence the very poor (the destitutes) to
    forsake some of their basic needs and buy/choose
    commodities not required immediately.
    In villages across India we can find TV sets
    that  run on generators (as there is no regular
    electricity supply)  but  no such  arrangement
    that village children may read or write in  the
    evenings.  Even  the very poor of the villages
    get to see (and enjoy) the programmes and the
    advertisements on these TV sets and make slow
    changes in their consumption patterns. 

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Stuart Ewen
  • The development of manufacturing capacity in
    excess of native want created a demand for a
    force that would teach people to consumeto use
    up the excess capacity.
  • Advertising was developed to provide that
    education
  • Consumption levels that were reserved for the
    rich were now expanding to include the middle
    class.
  • Fashion industry
  • Planned obsolescence
  • Manufactured wants

16
Consumer socialization
  • Children are taught how to consume at a very
    early age
  • Advertising to young children
  • In-school advertising
  • Peer evaluation based on physical appearance,
    branded clothes, etc.
  • Parents emphasis on material goods

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Schudson
  • We have always wanted to consume at high levels,
    but economic scarcity has frustrated us

21
How does commercial communication lead to
consumption ethic?
  • Takes real problems and proposes profit-based
    solutions to them
  • Headache Best solution, lie down till it goes
    away (though migraine may be another matter)
  • Turns natural conditions into a problem
  • Human smells, wrinkles
  • Makes individual feel inadequate, proposes a
    solution based on a purchase
  • Excessive narcissism
  • Skin not perfect
  • Eyebrow hair continues over nose
  • Figure
  • Hair

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Stay Free! (no author, date)
  • What these explanations miss, however, is that
    the forces behind ambient are inherent in the
    advertising process. Advertising works somewhat
    like bacteria After its hosts (consumers) are
    exposed, they become immune, so new strains of
    ads must develop and grow. These new strains are
    quickly copied, adding clutter, requiring new
    strains to emerge. Over time, advertising clutter
    leads to diminishing returns for individual
    campaigns. The more advertising grows, the more
    it must grow. The cycle accelerates and what was
    formerly considered unethical, offensive, or
    gauche is gradually mainstreamed out of
    necessity.

29
The invasion of the sacred by the profane
  • Even sacred parts of our culture and our lives
    have been colonized by the marketing imperative
  • Jesus jeans
  • The use of sacred symbols in advertising
  • Marketing in the schools
  • Marketing strategy for political campaigns
  • Marketing strategy for fundraising for good works
  • The commercialization of art
  • Painting
  • Music
  • Cinema
  • Stage

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Pre-packaged personalities
  • Cues for individual behavior drawn from
    communications aimed at selling
  • Image advertising
  • Image-conscious consumers
  • Cultural promotion of image-consciousness
  • You are what you wear
  • Transfer of brand image to brand wearer/purchaser
  • Transformation of consumption experience
    according to brand image

36
  • Is there a loss of authentic, meaningful life?
  • Communication and expression that are not tied to
    commerce?
  • Individual meaning and expression that has
    nothing to do with conspicuous consumption?
  • The things people say they want may not be things
    we can purchase.
  • Is it true that Money cant buy happiness?

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Resistance
  • The consumption ethic has become an area of
    concern in relatively recent times
  • AdBusters, Cultural Environment Movement
  • Actions taken
  • Buy Nothing Day
  • Culture jamming
  • Boycotts, etc.

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  • Dont it always seem to go that you dont know
    what youve got till its gone?
  • Rarely does social action predate disaster.
  • Need to hope for small disaster

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