![Episode 161: [ENG] Marx's View on Consumerism w/ Ishay Landa](https://assets.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images-2024/podcasts/images/a/a2f228f0-4f7b-471e-a0f9-3be6eaa0ebdd/episodes/b/b4a8e7e6-4a08-483c-9e4f-044b533c12ee/cover.jpg?v=1)
Episode 161: [ENG] Marx's View on Consumerism w/ Ishay Landa
Ishay Landa revisits Karl Marx’s understanding of consumption, in an effort to rescue it from the overshadowing legacy of critical theory & the Frankfurt school which has construed Marx as anti-consumerist and and a critic of "false needs".
Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (aphid.fireside.fm) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.
Show Notes
In his essay "The negation of abnegation" Ishay Landa revisits Karl Marx’s understanding of consumption, in an effort to rescue it from the overshadowing legacy of critical theory which has construed Marx as inveighing against false needs. It is argued that Marx regarded the expansion of needs entailed by capitalism in a generally favourable way, but saw capitalism as a system yoking use-value to the imperatives of profit accumulation, hence limiting and subjugating the consumption of the masses. While Marx’s position was radically different from conventional anti-consumerism it is equally incompatible with complacent affirmations of ‘the consumer society’ in that Marx at all times aimed at a revolutionary change which will transform consumption both quantitatively and qualitatively. Marx’s views are first discussed as expressed in the perennially-cited text, the 1844 Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts. The second part moves on to examine the further evolution of Marx’s ideas as found in later texts, particularly the Grundrisse.