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Journalism 614: Consumer Culture and Opinion. A Consumer Society  A nation of shoppers –Mass and Micro Marketing –Shopping Malls –Online Purchasing –Bargain.

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Presentation on theme: "Journalism 614: Consumer Culture and Opinion. A Consumer Society  A nation of shoppers –Mass and Micro Marketing –Shopping Malls –Online Purchasing –Bargain."— Presentation transcript:

1 Journalism 614: Consumer Culture and Opinion

2 A Consumer Society  A nation of shoppers –Mass and Micro Marketing –Shopping Malls –Online Purchasing –Bargain Hunting  Yet this consumption seemingly produces unease –Americans are preoccupied with getting and spending –Losing touch with deeper values and ways of living –Withdrawing from community life

3 Source & Effects of the Shift  What has caused this shift to a consumer society? –Some say mass media presentations of the “good life” –Media driving consumer sentiments and opinions –Emergence of ‘competitive consumption” Used to “Keep up with the Joneses”: conspicuous consumption Now we try to emulate the lifestyles of luxury seen on TV  Yet American’s find little satisfaction in buying –Working longer hours –Less happy with life and its direction –Heavily in debt to afford purchases –Environmental degradation tied to consumption

4 Delivering the goods… Personal Consumption Expenditures per capita (2000$) (Schor, 2006)

5 The Output Bias: Rising annual hours of work, CPS, 1967-2000 (Schor, 2006)

6 Income and Happiness: GDP per capita v. % very happy, US 1946-1996 (Layard 2005)

7 Consumerism and ecological disaster

8 Per Capita Footprints

9 Veblen and Status Consumption Models

10 Features of Status Models  Social positioning produce status consumption –We look to those a rung above us to determine acceptable opinions and behaviors, fashions and purchasing  Game is played through visible consumption –Must be seen to be part of a status game - who is ahead?  Trickle down model –middle class emulate upper-middle, who emulate the rich, who emulate the ultra-rich  Consumption is social, a way to marking ones social belonging and class status - badges of belonging

11 Social Comparison & Rising Inequality

12 Bourdieu and Distinction  French sociologist who observed that class status is gained, lost, and reproduced through consumption –Our clothing, car, home, and media consumption all display our social position  Can gain or lose access to social circle by displaying appropriate taste, manners, culture –Consumption helps to maintain basic patterns of power and inequality - this is why it matters!!!

13 New Consumerism  Neighbors are no longer the point of comparison –Upscale emulation parallels the decline of neighborhood life  Income and wealth concentrated in top 20% –Surge of conspicuous consumption at the top –Most no longer satisfied with middle-class life  Aspiration gaps –Desires outpace incomes –Credit card debt Averages $7000 per person, with $1000 in interest & penalties –Low savings rate 8% in 80s, 4% in 90s, 0% now!!!

14 The Rise of Competitive Consumption  Movement of women into the workforce –Decline of neighborhood contacts –Workplace, with wider range of social classes, becomes point of upward comparison  Less time with friends and family, more at work and front of the television –Consumption cues from work and television –Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous

15 Consumer Confidence  Consumer confidence is a driver of economy  Over consumption is sanctioned, even encouraged,

16 Consumer Knows Best?  Assume consumers are rational  Assumes consumers are well informed  Assume consumer preferences are consistent  Assume consumer preferences are independent  Assume consumption does not reduce public goods  But consumers are no more deliberative than citizens –Neither purely rational nor deluded, duped, and manipulated  In fact, they are one and same - consumer citizens –Artificial distinction - consumption can be civic/political

17 A Politics of Consumption  Changing opinions driving changes in markets and society –Right to a decent standard of living Ex. Fair trade coffee –Quality of life rather than quantity of stuff Ex. Downshifting –Ecologically sustainable consumption Ex. Global warming & consumption –Democratize consumption practices Ex. Starbury - Stephon Marbury –The politics of retailing Ex. Walmart vs. mainstreeet –Consumer movements Ex. Anti-globalism

18 Consumer critique & activist practice Newdream.org


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