The Consumer Trap: Big Business Marketing in American Life (History of Communication)
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Average customer review:Product Description
The Consumer Trap blows the lid off the trillion-dollar-a-year big business marketing industry, explaining how it soaks up economic and environmental resources while dominating our personal lives. Flouting conventional mainstream and radical thinking about consumer culture, Michael Dawson provides a step-by-step account of how big business marketing campaigns penetrate and alter the lives of ordinary Americans. Michael Dawson is an adjunct lecturer in the Department of Sociology at Portland State University. A volume in the series The History of Communication, edited by Robert W. McChesney and John C. Nerone
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #915110 in Books
- Published on: 2004-12-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 216 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
ADVANCE PRAISE "Big Brother is alive and well and working for Madison Avenue. Michael Dawson tells us what the media won't, how Big Business brainwashes citizens into consumers and undermines democracy. Everyone who fears the Thought Police should read this brilliant expos." -- John Stauber, coauthor of Toxic Sludge Is Good for You: Lies, Damn Lies, and the Public Relations Industry "Michael Dawson's meticulous and illuminating research into marketing theory and practice lays bare some of the most important developments of the twentieth century: the ways in which the sophisticated and self-conscious 'class coercion' designed by and for business leaders passed beyond meticulous management of the workplace to 'manipulating people's off-the-job perceptions and actions.' The goal is to ensure, as far as possible, that the lives of the 'underlying population' (in Veblen's phrase) will be in the hands of the masters of the highly concentrated private economy. Dawson adds new insights to expose still further the mythology of 'consumer sovereignty' and 'free markets,' and sketches directions for a humane alternative to domination by 'corporate overlords' and the state power to which they are closely linked." -- Noam Chomsky
Customer Reviews
A Brilliant Critique
This is no mere academic exercise despite its having been published by a university press. "The Consumer Trap" does for understanding contemporary commercial culture what Manufacturing Consent did for modern media studies. It is one of the most important and persuasive books I have ever read, and I compare it to the best of C. Wright Mills - which it resembles. Not since Veblen has a literate analyst taken on what capitalism has been doing to American life, gloves off, like Michael Dawson does. The statistics he cites about the staggering amounts being spent by business to keep the madness of our time-deprived and consumption-obsessed way of life going are worth the price of the book. Fans (like me) of Jacoby's "The Last Intellectuals" will keenly note that Dawson, albeit a Ph.D. in sociology, is making his living as a paralegal - and hence is free from the toady disciplinary and departmental politics that would have aborted this brilliant book. Tell your friends - and get together to discuss this book while we still have a remaining few shreds of social fabric which have not been turned into rubbish.
Class struggle from above
"The Consumer Trap" by Michael Dawson is a brilliant analysis of big business marketing and society. Drawing on the pioneering work of Thorstein Veblen, Mr. Dawson breaks new ground by unmasking the class basis of consumer culture. Positing that marketing functions as a coercive force that is wielded by the wealthy for the purpose of exploiting the working class, the author helps us deconstruct the logic of capital and imagine how a truly healthy and democratic society might come to pass.
Mr. Dawson discusses how marketing has thrived as a result of class stratification, where the inequal distribution of profits forces capitalists into fierce competition for relatively scarce consumer dollars. Importantly, Mr. Dawson demonstrates how marketers utilize sophisticated techniques to manipulate the behaviors of target audiences in order to attain corporate profit objectives. This insight helps Mr. Dawson debunk the ideological notion that marketing functions merely to align the forces of supply and demand in a competitive, free market economy; rather, the author explains that products such as automobiles, cigarettes and junk foods demonstrate that the well-being of consumers and the environment are less important than the prerogative of producing predictable and reliable returns to shareholders.
Mr. Dawson further contends that marketing exerts a "Piranha effect" where thousands of subtle psychological commands combine to exert significant changes in human behavior; that these advertising messages convince humans to engage in self-destructive behaviors is but one manifestation of the phenomenon. Mr. Dawson vividly describes how corporate-controlled processes have succeeded in subsuming the masses to a highly commodified and consumerist lifestyle. As this culture spreads through globalization, the author contends that the working class experiences an increasingly dangerous, deskilled and degraded existence while a relatively small number of investors reap huge financial rewards on a consistent basis.
Interestingly, Mr. Dawson theorizes about how those wishing to develop a Democratic/Socialist alternative to today's market totalitarianism might do well to coopt the tools of the capitalist overclass. Imagining that a political movement might coalesce around the public's growing resentment of the social and financial costs imposed by the consumer trap, Mr. Dawson believes that it might be possible for the public to utilize market research techniques to more efficiently allocate resources towards the production of socially-beneficial products and services. While acknowledging that the realities of corporate power makes it very difficult to nurture such a movement, the author believes that a Democratic/Socialist society could help inaugurate an era of peace, egalitarianism and environmental sustainability for all.
I highly recommend this exceptionally well-researched, imaginative and original work to everyone.
Absolutely Essential - A privilege to Read
This is a lost classic - a brilliantly formatted, tough-minded exploration of the corporate capitalist supersystem. Dawson illuminates its doings with style, commendable organization, and admirable clarity. His is not the end word on any of these momentous events of our time, and he may have left this kind of accessible acadamic scholarship behind, but you will be grateful for having found this gem. I continue to enjoy my CDs and not the wobbly LPs I gew up smashing, but I'll never look at our product usage society in the same way.
