iCommunism

iCommunism

by Colin Cremin
iCommunism

iCommunism

by Colin Cremin

Paperback

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Overview

Our relationship to consumption is not an easy one. Apart from being self-centred, superficial and
narcissistic, the consumer is held responsible for global warming, poverty and now, by binging on
easy credit, economic crisis. A straw man has many uses, including being part of the solution by
reducing carbon footprints, consuming more ethically and tightening the proverbial belt. iCommunism
defends the consumer against the prevailing politics of austerity. It splits the fetish from the
commodity fetish by taking the shine away from the commodity now signified in the ubiquitous
i of i branded products and transfers it over to communism. With ideology once again alive on the
streets of Europe, iCommunism reimagines Herbert Marcuse 1960s artistic critique of capitalism s
repressive performance principle for today s consumer society. Capitalism promised us shiny
things but only communism can deliver them in a different, more liberating, universal and sustainable form.
,

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781780992297
Publisher: Collective Ink
Publication date: 09/16/2012
Pages: 97
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.20(d)

About the Author

Colin Cremin was born in London and now lives in New Zealand where he lectures in sociology at the University of Auckland. Capitalism's New Clothes was published with Pluto Press in 2011 which examines how injunctions to be enterprising, ethical and to enjoy overlap and reinforce an ideological indeterminacy that in various ways implicates the subject in capitalism's destructive tendencies.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

1.0 Addiction 8

1.1 M-C-Mi 8

1.2 False Needs 16

2.0 Excess 20

2.1 Blow Out 22

2.2 Capitocene 25

3.0 Identification 34

3.1 Enjoy Division 36

3.2 Consumption for Dummies 40

3.3 Gotta Catch 'em All 46

3.4 Gift-wrapped 53

4.0 Conscience 58

4.1 Communicity 58

4.2 The Fetishisation of Guilt, and its Secret 64

5.0 Commons 70

5.1 Utopian Realism 70

5.2 Disaster Communism 74

Notes to the Text 81

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