Consuming and riots

In light of Stephen’s recent post and the Politics of Consumption conference (which I missed), I’ve been thinking about the recent riots in the UK.

The most striking images from those riots all feature consumption in someway.  The riots involved consumption practices and retail environments.  From what I’ve gleaned from my initial googling, there’s a lot of commentary blaming consumerism for the riots but I’ve not seen much on why the consumption relationship was the one used by rioters in this instance.  Put otherwise, why was this a good media for their message.  Not so much what were the causes of the riots but how did the methods work.

It seems a little naive to me to say something like ‘they were sick of being left out of our consumer society so they took what they wanted’.  Instead, I started to think about this in terms of a concept Stephen and I have crafted – commodity narcissism.  By this we argue that the consumption relationship is a highly efficient way for us to let out our aggressive instincts on the world around us.  It is, in this sense, not so much about maximizing utility, creating an identity or expressing some symbolic meaning than getting our kicks.  Stephen and I argue that this is why we see many consumers who claim to be ethically-concerned not acting on those concerns.  The knowledge about the results of their actions is self-defeating.  Even if we don’t want to admit it, it is pleasing to us to know we are fucking someone, somewhere – because it’s not about the harm we are inflicting on them but about knowing that we have the power to do harm them.

This, I think, might start to help us explain some of the actual actions undertaken in the riots – stealing rice, burning a furniture shop: it’s not the act itself but the need to know/demonstrate ability to perform it that we need to think about.  Conversely, this all got me thinking about why we’re so quick to blame “consumption” in this case – especially given the concerns Stephen raises about the concept in the first place.  I’d like to think about this more if no one else is.  ESRC are you reading this… email me.

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Consuming Consumption

Just over five years ago the University of Leicester allowed me to start referring to myself as a Lecturer in Social Theory and Consumption. I remember calling a friend up at the time in order to impose the good news upon him. He acted how I had hoped any friend would have acted within such a situation: by conspicuously avoiding a congratulatory tone, by stubbornly insisting upon the relative global insignificance of the event and, in an obviously well rehearsed tone of cynical resignation, by drawlingly bemoaning how yet another pretentious pseudo-intellectual was now sure to become yet another self-righteously pretentious pseudo-intellectual. The more than apparent symmetry between the occasion for this conversation, on the one hand, and my demonstrable ability to reasonably predict the course of its’ development, on the other, led me into believing this was a passage of life I would subsequently come to lament. Rather than mutually contemplating the poetry of a moment opening up to the inevitability of its passing, however, my friend and I instead remained true to the tenure of many of our previous dialogues by refusing to give so much as an inch to one another. “What the fuck do you know about tuberculosis anyway Dunner?” he snarlingly inquired. By way of dismissive response I patronisingly underlined how, by actually taking some time to listen to me at some point in his life, he might come to avoid prematurely misfiring so many contemptuous arrows into his own foot. 

It isn’t only within discussions between my friend and I that consumption is bound to go through a laborious degree of terminological give and take, of course. Those for whom it doesn’t conjure up associations of blood-spattered handkerchiefs concealed in denial have more than enough scope for conversational incompatibility remaining at their disposal. Etymologically and ecologically, we are regularly met with the suggestion that consumption is one of the names for destruction or annihilation; anthropologically, it often denotes a mode of communication; economically, it presupposes production; whereas aesthetically, it often serves to designate a mode of experience, or even to stand in as a name for experience itself. In what way are these various lines of enquiry to be brought together? What should a student of consumption actually study? What isn’t consumption? The first joke I tell my new students every year riffs on how the study of consumption seems all consuming precisely because it is logically self-consuming. Nobody ever laughs at the joke and this only goes to prove, by way of self-fulfilling prophecy, that I’ve gone and misunderstood the desires of my consumers.   

The most obvious way in which consumption is rendered observable and verifiable today, of course, is as a key economic indicator. This is one of the many domiciles claimed by the sovereign consumer of neo-liberal economics which sees its’ own property rights everywhere: the free to choose citizen who votes for parties at the polling station and for producers at the supermarket. Approaching consumption as an empirically demonstrable category makes it possible for analysts to put paid to the terminological ambiguity in which consumption is traditionally shrouded as a means of seeming to directly address the pressing macro-economic anxieties of the day. The anti-recessionary tonic will be concocted out of some parts consumer confidence, after all, so the contemporary student of consumption would be presumably well advised to apply themselves less to the question of what consumption is, or to whether it should prevail, and more to the problem of how to increase consumption’s occurrence for the sake of bringing the promised land which exists beyond recession that little bit closer to home.

J.K. Galbraith famously lambasted the seeming delusions of such a view of consumption over half a century ago. The Affluent Society develops a strident critique of what would become known as neo-liberalism’s account of consumer demand as a logical and moral imperative by gesturing toward the short sightedness inherent in the treating of all matters of public policy as matters of private preference. On the one hand, in an analysis that remains timely, Galbraith’s book polemically underlines the logical and moral hazards inherent within any macro-economic policy which would facilitate increased consumption by way of relaxed financial regulation. On the other hand, perhaps less in keeping with our time, Galbraith neglects to seriously consider why such an obnoxiously deluded world-view might come to persist. Consider the recent example of intelligent creatures finding themselves compelled to consider snow as a moral issue rather than as a meteorological event. With Galbraith, we might well sneer at such moments of patronisingly nonsensical hubris. Nevertheless, we repeatedly fall back upon this economic deterministic outlook on the world with alarming regularity and despite our better judgment. Of course snow isn’t a moral issue but for the purposes of how we now see the world lets think and act as if it was. Galbraith explains the persistence of such nonsense simply on the basis of the vested interests contained within the preservation of what he calls the conventional wisdom. If only it were so straightforward.

These notes are occasioned by the fact that less than a fortnight ago I attended a conference which I had spent much of the past year co-organising with Norah Campbell and Alan Bradshaw. As luck would have it, our conference on the Politics of Consumption, in Dublin, was synchronous with a strong public mobilisation against the privatisation of Ireland’s system of water provision. The timing of the event seemed to have run in our favour whilst the hard work of our contributors more than justified our many background endeavours. From Ben Fine’s opening keynote speech on Consumption Matters, through to Kate Soper’s keynote on The Politics of Prosperity and onto to the closing roundtable on The Politics of Consumption in Ireland, we were treated to a variety of provocations and analyses which addressed the phenomenon of consumption in its conceptual and political complexity. The event’s programme is here, audio recordings are available on request and a special issue of ephemera will follow towards the beginning of next year.

To briefly come back to my friend, I should say that he laughed right into my Skype mediated face when I suggested he should come along to the event for the sake of learning something. I take this as evidence for how consumption is partially a matter of individual dispositions which cannot be reduced to extra-individual phenomena. He takes such an account as evidence for the self-righteously pretentious pseudo-intellectualism he had previously predicted. As the producer of this text, of course, I’m bound to go for option one. Let us assume for similar reasons that my friend will go for option two. Which of the options would you choose? Stated otherwise: in what way will you express your freedom? This is the logic of the sovereign consumer applied to the act of critical reading. It is analogous to the form of democracy advocated by neo-liberal economics in as much as the aggregation of choice events is ultimately treated as a mode of justification which cannot be legitimately challenged.

To oppose this model at its roots, however, it isn’t so much a question of opposing potentially absurd choices in themselves, or even in total, so much as it is a question of opposing the abstract proposition that it is better to be able to choose, than not. This fundamental alternative brings us towards a potential paradox by virtue of the fact that it too can be understood as a matter of choice, of preference, of consumption. The inherent difficulty in opposing the logic of the sovereign consumer ultimately becomes the very paradox of choosing to choose against choice. This is a paradox which makes for a series of entertaining pedagogical and philosophical activity, for sure, but it also happens to be the paradox out of which an account of the consumer which neo-liberal economics would be incapable of accommodating might, or might not, eventually become produced.

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For those who occasionally have recourse to the CPPE list to find those out of the way papers that your own university does not have a subscription to, or if you just want to stick it to the publishers, this looks like an enterprise that is worthy of support:

http://www.pirateuniversity.org/content/pirate-university

 

 

 

 

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More Philosophical Freebies

Too lazy or thick to read all that difficult philosophy? Well the nice folk at Open Culture have put a bunch of TV interviews conducted by Brian McGee with famous and very posh philosophers on the interweb.  Go here.

Aside from Iris Murdoch and Martha Nussbaum there is a noticeable absence of ‘Lady Philosophers’ from the list, but this was the seventies which were, as I dimly remember, quite crap.  You may feel the urge to wear tweed and light up a pipe when listening to these.  If so, go with it….

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French Theory Download

Those of you with a ‘thing’ for contemporary French theory will find this useful – if you don’t know it already:

http://cultureandcommunication.org/galloway/FTT/

 It is a FREE download of a bunch of lectures by Alexander Galloway on lots of deeply trendy incomprehensible types……  Enjoy

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The uselessness of philosophy

A belated report on the visit of our old friend Ruud Kaulingfreks to the CPPE in February. Ruud talked to his chapter from the Campbell Jones and Rene ten Bos collection ‘Philosophy and Organization‘. His theme was the various ways in which the operability of philosophy has been mobilised in management education and consultancy. The philosophically equipped consultant might be seen as trickster or a joker figure – someone who offers an alternative learning, but who also runs the risk of being seen as pointless, as wasteful. But such an intervention runs counter to the logic of training as a form of governance, which is experienced by its recipients as either a reward (‘come join us for a weekend away in a castle in Poland’) or a punishment (‘attendance at this session is mandatory and will be monitored’). The current vogue for ‘ethical consultancy’ (a glorious term which attracted much discussion) might be seen in a tradition of professional philosophy dating to the late nineteenth/early twentieth century. Such philosophy may be seen to have a role as sanctioning or justifying senior managerial decisions. The CEO searches for their own legitimacy, and this search acquires a kind of quasi-spiritual or religious quality. Non-executive directors would then be a philosopher caste for business. The wise elders assisting in the spiritual quest for (commercial) enlightenment. Perhaps we could see in this a tacit acknowledgement of guilt, or the lack of any grounds for legitimacy. Better yet, the gesture of turning to philosophy (or art, or whatever other ‘wasteful’ activity that can be bought in) is a demonstration of the power and the cynicism of the senior manager – ‘I will do what I want and I will take whatever I choose and make it mine in the full knowledge of its incoherence’. The cult which grows around the supposed wisdom of the great business gurus, such as Steve Jobs, is a celebration of the seriousness and sanctity with which the task of seeking meaning in multi-layered propositions which express only their utter vacuousness is pursued: it is turtlenecks all the way down (with apologies to William James).

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Exterritory

There were strong echoes of Stefano Harney’s recent seminar at the Exterritory event in Paris this week.  Exterritory is a project initiated by Israeli artists, filmmakers and curators Ruti Sela and Mayaan Amir in 2009, to explore some of the many contradictions produced by the struggle over land in the Palestine/Israel conflict.  Because both sides lay claim in various ways to ‘territory’ (conceived in multiple ways), Ruti and Mayaan wanted to explore the possibility of stepping outside territory altogether to innovate modes of resistance and to highlight the absurdities of the battle over land.  This has involved many different events over the years, most strikingly their projection of images of the region and its many people onto the sails of yachts at night in international waters off the Israeli coast.

Anne Davidian from the Evens Foundation opens the Exterritory symposium

The event in Paris – co-hosted by the Kadist and Evens Foundations – was the first of a number of planned symposia bringing together artists, curators, academics and other oddments to consider what ‘exterritory’ might mean in practice.  The Paris symposium explored various aspects of exterritorial and extraterritorial space (the distinction between the two being far more meaningful in French).  The first session included (defiantly non-) geographer Stuart Elden’s thought-provoking analysis of the construction of ‘exile’ in Shakespeare’s plays and Laurent Jeanpierre‘s examination of theoretical and juridical notions of exterritoriality. The second session consisted of my own rambling thoughts inspired by events of 2008 and the ‘flash-crash’ – ‘Where has all the (xeno)money gone?‘ – and Dana Diminescu‘s fascinating exploration of the complex and emergent spatialities of migration. All four papers were skilfully brought together by the contribution of Anat Ben David, one of Ruti and Mayaan’s regular collaborators on Exterritory.

Angus getting flash with the Flash-Crash

All sorts of cross-cutting themes and resonances emerged from the papers and subsequent discussion that I won’t rehearse here (the event was filmed and will eventually appear on-line) but for me the most striking aspect was the ubiquity of social, economic, political, individual, collective, planned and spontaneous ‘spaces’ that do not conform to the established norms of legally-defined and reproduced ‘territoriality’.  Indeed, by the time we’d worked through the ambiguous spatialities of exile, xenomoney, migration, cyberspace, exception, and many others, territory itself was beginning to look like the minority sport.  Which, of course, makes it all the more interesting that so much of our legal, institutional, police, military and political activity should be devoted to what emerges as a very narrow and privileged mode of living in and thinking about the world.

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Logisticality, or the Shipped – Stefano Harney

Stefano Harney returned to the CPPE on the 25th of April to elaborate upon the politics of logistics – what he called, ‘logisticality, or the shipped’.  An audio recording of the talk can be downloaded here and a transcript of the talk will be posted shortly. The talk draws a series of obvious parallels to a presentation previously given by another of the CPPE’s prodigal sons, Martin Parker. Martin’s soon to be published paper on containerization is available for download here. Stefano and Martin are to be thanked for many things, not least of all for demonstrating the virtues of not thinking outside the box.

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