Review of: Beyond Consumer Capitalism: Media and the Limits to Imagination, by Justin Lewis. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2013. 232 pp. ISBN 978-0-7456-5024-1When critics take aim at a society gone awry through an obsession with consumption, wealth and individualism, their arguments are usually about political interests and structural forces. Justin Lewis’s book is a breath of fresh air, not only because it’s beautifully written and argued, but because he asks us to think about these pressing problems on an imaginative level. Imagine, he asks, if advertisements were banned? Or imagine if advertising creatives were told to produce any story rather than one aimed at selling
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for satisfaction that most working class people have, without being revolutionary. It would be dange...
Professor Martin Upchurch reviews 'Zombie Capitalism: Global Crisis and the Relevance of Marx', by C...
Guy Standing’s (2017) The Corruption of Capitalism gets it wrong from the very beginning: the title ...
Overproduction, consumerism and commodity fetishism — it seems like these tendencies are omnipotent ...
What is the role of the media and cultural industries in late capitalism? In Beyond Con...
Consumer capitalism dominates our economy, our politics and our culture. Yet there is a growing body...
This book will be very useful for any social scientist wanting to know why capitalism as an economic...
Cognitive Capitalism argues the political economy born with Adam Smith no longer offers us the possi...
The financial crisis caused many to reconsider the desirability and feasibility of capitalism. In Wh...
Book review of: Paul Collier, The Future of Capitalism: Facing the New Anxieties. HarperCollins (201...
FROM THE REVIEW: "Capitalism is the 'natural reality' of the day: we live in and with its beauty and...
Review of: Seventeen Contradictions and the End of Capitalism, by David Harvey. London: Profile Book...
Does Capitalism Have a Future? is the work of five distinguished senior authors addressing the futur...
[First paragraph] n the twentieth century, the development of consumer society in the West was inext...
After Capitalism: Rethinking Economic RelationshipsPaul Mills and Michael SchluterCambridge, UK: Jub...
for satisfaction that most working class people have, without being revolutionary. It would be dange...
Professor Martin Upchurch reviews 'Zombie Capitalism: Global Crisis and the Relevance of Marx', by C...
Guy Standing’s (2017) The Corruption of Capitalism gets it wrong from the very beginning: the title ...
Overproduction, consumerism and commodity fetishism — it seems like these tendencies are omnipotent ...