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- Title
From Work to Consumption. Transatlantic Visions of Individuality in Modern Mass Society.
- Authors
WIRSCHING, ANDREAS
- Abstract
This essay deals with the ambiguous and contradictory relationship between labour, consumption and individuality in modern mass culture. This relationship has been conceptualised rather differently in American and European visions of individuality. In recent years, the long-lasting tradition of European (and especially German) scepticism towards the consumer society, which was nourished by conservative, (neo)liberal and Marxist influences, has retreated in favour of a more general acceptance of modern consumerism. While labour has not been replaced as the most important means of economic and cultural participation, the social construction of personal individuality is seen to take place through an ever-increasing multitude of means of consumption. The article analyses this profound process of cultural change and at the same time reflects upon the opportunities and limits of the current scholarly paradigm concerning the consumer society.
- Subjects
UNITED States; EUROPE; SOCIOLOGY of work; CONSUMERISM; INDIVIDUALITY; AMERICAN influences on European civilization; SOCIAL conditions in Europe; HISTORY of popular culture -- 20th century; POPULAR culture -- American influences; CONSUMPTION (Economics); MARXIST analysis; SOCIAL criticism; 20TH century European history
- Publication
Contemporary European History, 2011, Vol 20, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
0960-7773
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/S0960777310000330