The Age of Access: The new culture of hypercapitalism, where all of life is a paid-for experience

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

Visionary activist and author Jeremy Rifkin exposes the real stakes of the new economy, delivering "the clearest summation yet of how the Internet is really changing our lives" (The Seattle Times). Imagine waking up one day to find that virtually every activity you engage in outside your immediate family has become a "paid-for" experience. It's all part of a fundamental change taking place in the nature of business, contends Jeremy Rifkin. After several hundred years as the dominant organizing paradigm of civilization, the traditional market system is beginning to deconstruct. On the horizon looms the Age of Access, an era radically different from any we have known. Amazon.com Review He's been called the postmodern Chicken Little, but it happens that the sky really is falling. Jeremy Rifkin pulls the plug on the trend away from property ownership and free public life in The Age of Access: The New Culture of Hypercapitalism Where All of Life Is a Paid-For Experience. As usual, he's a bit ahead of the curve--most of us aren't fully immersed yet in the sea of leased products and packaged experiences that he sees awaiting us. Still, his eerie vision of a world of gatekeepers paying each other for access to nearly every aspect of human life brings a chilling new meaning to the phrase "pay to play" and should spark some debate over our new cultural revolution. Using examples from business and government experiments with just-in-time access to goods and services and resource sharing, Rifkin defines a new society of renters who are too busy breaking the shackles of material possessions to mourn the passing of public property. Are we encouraging alienation or participation? Can we trust corporations with stewardship of our social lives? True to form, the author asks more questions than he answers--a sign of an open mind. If property is theft, leased access is extortion, and The Age of Access warns us of the complex changes coming in our relationships with our homes, our communities, and our world. --Rob Lightner From Publishers Weekly In his latest synthesis of business analysis and academic philosophizing, Rifkin (The End of Work, The Biotech Century, etc.) argues that we are in the midst of a new age in which "concepts, ideas and images--not things--are the real items of value" and where "the purchase of lived experiences becomes the consummate commodity." In the book's first half, Rifkin contends that ownership of property has become increasingly devalued. Today's companies avoid amassing physical capital, which can later prove "an albatross" that prevents them from keeping up with rapid technological advances. Instead, they prefer to "outsource ownership," contracting third parties to provide and maintain equipment. This trend combines with others, such as the proliferation of service relationships, to put more emphasis on access than ownership, heralding a time when what companies sell will be human experience itself and all cultural activities will be commodified. In the book's second half, Rifkin shows how "experience industries"--such as travel and entertainment--are coming to dominate the new global economy. "More and more of the global cultural sphere--its natural wonders, cathedrals, museums, palaces, parks, rituals, festivals--is being siphoned off into the marketplace," he says, where it serves as a backdrop "for enacting paid-for cultural experiences" that is divorced from historical context. As in Rifkin's earlier works, the author asserts the truth of his ideas in considerable detail without offering much supporting evidence, leaving readers either to believe him or not. Even so, his larger historical and social perspective and lack of technological boosterism is refreshing. Agent: Jim Stein. (May)

Author(s): Jeremy Rifkin
Publisher: Jeremy P. Tarcher / Putnam
Year: c2000.

Language: English
Pages: 312
City: New York

Acknowledgments
Contents
PART I: The Next Capitalist Frontier
1. Entering the Age of Access
Between Two Worlds
The Clash of Culture and Commerce
Proteans and Proletarians
2. When Markets Give Way to Networks
The Connected Economy
The Hollywood Organizational Model
3. The Wieghtless Economy
Shrinking Real Estate
Just-in-Time Inventory
The Dematerialization of Money
No More Savings
A Borrowed Existence
Outsourcing Ownership
Intangible Assets
Mind over Matter
4. Monopolizing Ideas
Franchising Access
Leasing DNA
5. Everything Is a Service
The Rise and Fall of Propertied Goods
The Birth of the Service Economy
The Evolution of Goods into Services
The End of Sales
The New Service Providers
Giving Away the Goods, and Charging for the Services
6. Commodifying Human Relationships
The Customer Is the Market
The Shift from a Production to a Marketing Perspective
New Kinds of Communities
7. Access as a Way of Life
Gated Communities
Renting a Lifestyle
Time-Share Communities
Real-Estate vs. Temporal-Estates
PART II: Enclosing the Cultural Commons
8. The New Culture of Capitalism
Communication and Culture
The Rise of Cultural Production
The Oldest Cultural Industry
Mall Culture
From Being Cultures to Being Entertained
Every Business Is Show Business
9. Mining the Cultural Landscape
Marketing the Culture
The New Gatekeepers
Cultural Intermediaries
10. A Postmodern Stage
Modernity
Postmodernity
Changing Forms of Consciousness
The Protean Persona
Reprogramming the Mind
The New Thespians
All the World Is a Stage
11. The Connected and the Disconnected
The New Corporate Moguls
The End of the Nation-State
Living Outside the Electronic Gates
The Right and Left of Access
12. Toward an Ecology of Culture and Capitalism
A New Rights Theory
Two Kinds of Access
Resurrecting Culture
A New Mission for Education
Politicizing the Third Sector
The Dialectics of a Play Ethos
Notes
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Bibliography
Index