The Ideology of Consumption: The Challenges Facing a Consumerist Society (original) (raw)
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Discourse on the Consumerist Community Consumption
This article aims at analyzing community consumption as a practice model which will create a new model in the understanding of the consumption to the consumptive pattern. In its development, community consumption pattern brings about a shift because of technology and modern facility availability. An approach used to write this report is library research, while the analysis technique applied is a content analysis aiming at getting a valid inference and can be reobserved based on is context. The presence of technology as a representation of facility in the fulfillment of needs are able to encourage the creation of social change, like the spreading of consumerist culture, the change of fashion and lifestyle mode where this condition is institutionalized in a community culture structure so that consuming goods do not only depend on the needs logic but also cover to someone's emotional substance. That situation systematically shifts traditional values and directs to the global behavior. Consumption towards the construction of consumptive society becomes a conceptual and historical illustration to understand the consumption shifting to the consumptive practice.
International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation, 2021
The Frankfurt School was the first school to discern the roles of the media in shaping human thought, influencing politics, and increasing the insatiable demand of consumers in capitalist societies. The analysis brought to the fore by Adorno and Horkheimer regarding the ‘Culture Industry’ illustrated a model of media as tools of hegemony and social control advanced by Walter Benjamin, Herbert Marcuse, Erich Fromm, and Jurgen Habermas. The School also examined the repercussions of mass culture and the rise of the consumer society on the proletariat that was aimed to be the instrument of revolution in the classical Marxian scenario. Another thing that was analyzed is how the culture industries and consumer society were considered as stabilizing forces of contemporary capitalism. Therefore, they were among the first to see the expansion of communication and mass media roles in politics, socialization and social life, culture, and the construction of docile subjects as Foucault puts it....
Consumption and society in the 21st century
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We are delighted to present the inaugural issue of Consumption and Society. Our ambition for the journal is to invigorate and innovate the field of consumption studies and to renew the relevance of the study of consumption for the global social challenges of the 21st century. Consumption and Society will contribute to debates on contested aspects of consumption, such as environmental impacts, digitalisation, the shifting balance of collective versus private consumption, commodification and inequalities. Moreover, the journal aims to bring the distinctive lens of consumption studies to key contemporary debates, around issues such as the Anthropocene, care, decolonisation, surveillance capitalism, platform economies and political populism. This reflects an understanding of consumption as embedded in wider socioeconomic, political and cultural configurations, and intrinsically related to issues of social and environmental justice, as well as other normative notions such as prosperity, wellbeing and the good life. Journals are often launched in response to a particular historical moment and to scholarly reflection on those new times. This was certainly true of the two major journals of our field, Consumption, Markets and Culture, founded in 1997, and The Journal of Consumer Culture, founded in 2001. In the editorial introduction to the first issue of Consumption, Markets and Culture, Fuat Firat (1997: 1) reflected that the journal would address these three phenomena through which 'understanding of the critical issues of the end of the twentieth century' were commonly conceived. The title of The Journal of Consumer Culture is equally instructive of the core concerns of consumption scholarship at the time of its launch. The field of consumption studies was an early touchstone for major debates on macro-social change, especially around the issues of globalisation, the rise of cultural pluralism, aestheticisation and the decline of traditional
The Economic Dımension of Consumer Society
International Journal of Management and Economics Invention, 2018
The most important player that led to the emergence of the notion of the consumer society was, undoubtedly, the capitalism. As for that the basic foundation of the sustainability of capitalist system, which aimed to make a profit and to renew constantly itself, was, the production. Moreover, the only way to be able to be sustainedthe production was, to pass through the consumption.Hence, the consumption-oriented activities occupied all the spaces of daily life and correspondingly,the advertising boards, encouraging to the consumption, were placed in everywhere from the logos on the clothes, to the billboards on the streets.The capitalist system, at the same time, with utilizing the sense of producing for consumption,constantly created new needs and so, it reproduced itself every once in awhile.After all, for the capitalism, there was no object or value that could not be able to be consumed. From this perspective, in this study, the consumer society were handled in terms of capitalism. Firstly, the definitions of consumption and consumption society were examined and then,the historical development of the consumption society phenomenon were explained and finally,the factors, stimulating the consumption society and the economic growth, were evaluated on the basis of capitalism.
Consumerism is the Core Ideology of the Capitalism
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In the present era, the same old world seems to shrink due to the power of advanced communication. By just sitting in their living room, people know what is going on in the other part of the world. “Globalization” becomes prominent catch phase of the 1990s. It has brought about a unitary status. The global is integrated into the culture of the other parts of the world, particularly into the Third World countries, through the economic and media systems. It can be said that cultural invasion originates from consumerism, distributed worldwide by transnational corporations (TNCs) and multinational corporations (MNCs) and reinforced profoundly by advertising. In other to understand this phenomenon, it is necessary to examine through the original process in which the problem arises.
Religion as a Colonial Moral Production Machine (behavior). - Neocolonization of Capital (1). Bentuk In the contemporary intellectual landscape, the concept of "Neo-Religio: Decolonization of the Means of Production of Doctrinal Value" emerges as a challenging paradigm to re-understand the role of religion in shaping social and cultural reality. This paradigm invites us to dive into the complexity of the interplay between spiritual beliefs, social structures, and power dynamics that have shaped our societies for centuries. At its core, Neo-Religio proposes a critical deconstruction of doctrinal values that have long been considered sacred and unshakable. This process of decolonization not only aims to free religious thought from the shackles of colonial heritage, but also to open up space for more authentic and contextual reinterpretation. In this context, religion is no longer seen as a static entity, but rather as a dynamic system that continues to evolve, respond to, and shape changing social realities.