Consumed: How Markets Corrupt Children, Infantilize Adults, and Swallow Citizens Whole

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"Powerful and disturbing. No one who cares about the future of our public life can afford to ignore this book." ―Jackson Lears

A powerful sequel to Benjamin R. Barber's best-selling Jihad vs. McWorld, Consumed offers a vivid portrait of a global economy that overproduces goods and targets children as consumers in a market where there are never enough shoppers―and where the primary goal is no longer to manufacture goods but needs. Disturbing, provocative, and compelling, this book examines phenomena as seemingly disparate as adolescent fashion trends for adults, megachurches, declining voter participation, the privatization of the public sphere, branding, and the rise of online shopping to show how the freedoms of the free market have undermined the freedoms of the deliberative adult citizen. Barber brings together extensive empirical research with an original theoretical framework for understanding our contemporary predicament.

Author(s): Benjamin R. Barber
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Year: 2008

Language: English
Pages: 416
City: New York

Cover
Praise
Dedication
ALSO BY BENJAMIN R. BARBER
Title Page
Copyright
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
PART ONE The Birth of Consumers
1 Capitalism Triumphant and the Infantilist Ethos
2 From Protestantism to Puerility
PART TWO The Eclipse of Citizens
3 Infantilizing Consumers: The Coming of Kidults
4 Privatizing Citizens: The Making of Civic Schizophrenia
5 Branding Identities: The Loss of Meaning
6 Totalizing Society: The End of Diversity
PART THREE The Fate of Citizens
7 Resisting Consumerism: Can Capitalism Cure Itself?
8 Overcoming Civic Schizophrenia: Restoring Citizenship in a World of Interdependence
Notes