Cultural Capitalism - A path towards decadence and despair

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Fared Gaderi
Cultural Capitalism - A path towards decadence and despair

Link: Cultural Capitalism

Quote:

On one level cultural capitalism might be defined as all the outward things which have come to characterize American ‘civilization' since the 1950′s, but it is much more, because as culture is rooted in spiritual and mental predicates, capitalism as we know it is itself a symptom of all that is modern - in which the aspirations of man are merely for temporal goals, namely the acquisition of more "material," and nothing else. In practical life, this means that for many, running the money rat race is an imperative to survive and make a meager living, while for those who are a bit better off is a competition for more possessions and trinkets. For the very wealthy, living in an existential impasse of confusion between need and want. This is the psychological corner stone of capitalism and consumerism driven by marketing and advertising: turning a desire for a product into an artificial need where enough is never enough - hence the need for ever more and more possessions and diversions. Rather significantly, we might note that while cultural Marxism is adapted to disrupt the social patterns in the West, cultural capitalism is aimed at disrupting developing or non-Western countries, and thus serves for a vector of imperialism. In this sense, it ironically fufills the Marxist pseudo-prophecy of societies needing to pass through a phase of "capitalism" before the socialist phase can be accomplished.

Catchfire Catchfire's picture

Interesting article, Fared. Thank you. I will have a closer look at it a bit later. Until then, welcome to babble!

M. Spector M. Spector's picture

A very muddle-headed, anti-Marxist rant from a reactionary religious source.

The self-styled "Chairman" of this blog, William van Nostrand, is a right-wing nutter who rails against "modernity" in the form of atheism, secularism, liberalism, feminism, Marxism, and yes, capitalism.

Not worth wasting time on.

Unionist

Quote:
... culture is rooted in spiritual and mental predicates ...

Oh really? Rooted in predicates. How would one sketch that metaphor?

Quote:
... the aspirations of man are merely for temporal goals ...

And women?

Quote:
For the very wealthy, living in [is?] an existential impasse of confusion between need and want.

Food for... something.

Quote:
This is the psychological corner stone of capitalism and consumerism driven by marketing and advertising: turning a desire for a product into an artificial need where enough is never enough - hence the need for ever more and more possessions and diversions.

How very profound.

Oh, I ventured into the full article, wherein this gem appears:

Quote:
... capitalism is merely the pseudo-antithesis of its much more deranged cousin of Marxism, since both ultimately reduce man to a mere “cog in the machine”.

I believe I've said enough.

Slumberjack

Hmmm....I'll have to give this a read at some point, as some aspects of it remind me of a thesis on post 70s feminism I happened across several months ago.

MegB

Anti-feminist, anti-Marxist crap.  Troll alert.

M. Spector M. Spector's picture

Rebecca West wrote:

anti-Marxist crap.

When did babble start cracking down on anti-Marxist crap? [img]http://archive.rabble.ca/babble/eek.gif[/img]

Unionist

M. Spector wrote:

Rebecca West wrote:

anti-Marxist crap.

When did babble start cracking down on anti-Marxist crap? [img]http://archive.rabble.ca/babble/eek.gif[/img]

Laughing

Now that it's babble policy, I'm going to review all past posts and use "flag as offensive" as required.

 

Patrick Mahoney

Reading the first paragraph almost made me want to throw up.

The site linked in the OP is a right-wing hate site and thus has no credibility here.

Ken Burch

I had trouble getting through that too...my favorite phrase was "the Freudo-Marxist welfare state". 

(as if fusing those two schools of thought wouldn't cause the head of every Marxist and every Freudian to explode).

Slumberjack

Haven't read the article as I originally mentioned I would do up thread, but managed to skim the first few topics under the 'culture' heading, and adjusted such intentions accordingly.

Jacob Two-Two

Not going to read the article, but no reason why it can't spur some discussion regardless. I think there's something to that notion of the "cog in the machine". I find both Marxism and capitalism are reductive as philosophies, essentially materialist and lacking in any apprehension of humanity outside of economic activity. You could say that's not their purpose, but I find both have the unspoken assumption of being larger than mere industry, with cultural pretenses that are wholely unsatisfactory.

M. Spector M. Spector's picture

Neither Marxism nor capitalism is a philosophy.

Slumberjack

What there is to be said of them both might take the form of philosophy, but we're not dealing with any of that here.

flight from kamakura
MegB

M. Spector wrote:

Rebecca West wrote:

anti-Marxist crap.

When did babble start cracking down on anti-Marxist crap? [img]http://archive.rabble.ca/babble/eek.gif[/img]

Actually, there have been several mod "interventions" over anti-Marxist/ socialist screed over the years.  I know babble isn't your flavour of left wing progressiveness, and we can't moderate this board  24/7 (I'm pretty sure no one would want that anyway), but we do our best.  This isn't something new or unique around babble policy.

Ken Burch

And the poster who started all those threads with the "Riding The Tiger" links HAS been banned...and deservedly so...so how much more could the mods do on this particular situation?

Patrick Mahoney

Ken Burch wrote:

And the poster who started all those threads with the "Riding The Tiger" links HAS been banned...and deservedly so...so how much more could the mods do on this particular situation?

Ken, I'm not absolutely sure about this but I think the ADL and SPLC have places where you can report hate sites if you think it's worthwile.  They will investigate and if necessary work with the internet companies to shut them down or prosecute the owners.

Let be heard and not be silenced.  Make a report if you'd like & stand strong against hate!

M. Spector M. Spector's picture

Yes, by all means let's give credence to the ADL by treating them as a trusted arbiter of what's anti-semitic and what isn't. Then we can all go and tap our heads against a wall until it feels better.

Ken Burch

Patrick Mahoney wrote:

Ken Burch wrote:

And the poster who started all those threads with the "Riding The Tiger" links HAS been banned...and deservedly so...so how much more could the mods do on this particular situation?

Ken, I'm not absolutely sure about this but I think the ADL and SPLC have places where you can report hate sites if you think it's worthwile.  They will investigate and if necessary work with the internet companies to shut them down or prosecute the owners.

Let be heard and not be silenced.  Make a report if you'd like & stand strong against hate!

OK...I'll check that out and report it if possible.

Gaian

Your welcoming style is sort of worn at the edges, MS. Probably, Patrick is trying to use the devices available in the real world to people who fight hate, whereas you are cutting to the quick in the manner we have learned hereabouts.

You could suggest that Patrick consult some threads on the subject in the politics threads.

I look forward to seeing Patrick's "ah ha", along the way. Many folks would have told you to bugger off with your snottiness, by now.

M. Spector M. Spector's picture

"Either you repeat the same conventional doctrines everybody is saying, or else you say something true, and it will sound like it's from Neptune." - Chomsky

Patrick Mahoney

Gaian wrote:
Your welcoming style is sort of worn at the edges, MS. Probably, Patrick is trying to use the devices available in the real world to people who fight hate, whereas you are cutting to the quick in the manner we have learned hereabouts. You could suggest that Patrick consult some threads on the subject in the politics threads. I look forward to seeing Patrick's "ah ha", along the way. Many folks would have told you to bugger off with your snottiness, by now.

Actually I wasn't saying that my way is the only way, but those are certainly viable options for working within the boundaries of the law.  Depending on the circumstances there are different things you can do.  For instance on facebook back when there were discussion boards I came across some posts about among other things, how blacks commit more crimes than whites, and Israel supposedly not having a right to exist. Utter trash that isn't even recyclable. Since back then most users were college students I made a few records of what was being said and informed that university's Office of Diversity about what they were saying.  Wasn't expecting a response but a few weeks later I got an e-mail from them thanking me saying that they had talked to the student and he promised not to say those things again.

In this case it is a private website so we can't take that route.  One way is to at least let those who monitor hate know about it, but as I said it's not the only way.

Gaian

quote: "In this case it is a private website so we can't take that route. One way is to at least let those who monitor hate know about it, but as I said it's not the only way."

You are a calming, much-needed voice here, Patrick.

Would you mind moseying over to the thread on International Politics and perhaps explaining just what is happening in Georgia on a couple of fronts? The Obama front, to begin with?

6079_Smith_W

M. Spector wrote:

When did babble start cracking down on anti-Marxist crap? [img]http://archive.rabble.ca/babble/eek.gif[/img]

That would depend on what you mean.

Presumably there is a difference between opposing Marxism, and taking a critical look at the goals of those who say they are promoting it. 

And presumably saying that one does not agree with someone's interpretation of it  is not the same as opposing it.

Nathaniel.Mossiblov

I think in some ways we can thank Marx for his groundbreaking analysis of capitalism and his many theories in regards to economics, especially his criticism of capitalism. Actually, his analysis was not terribly different from other theoreticians of history. As early as the 13th century the Arabic philosopher wrote similar things about social conflict, aristocracies, the laboring classes and the moneyed classes.

With that said, the above poster 6079_Smith_W does have a point in saying that there are those who purport to sympathize with the proletariat while simultaneously working against their interests.

 

6079_Smith_W

@ Nathaniel Mossiblov

My personal feelings; I don't consider myself anti-Marxist. Someone is a Marxist? Not my concern.

I should add that my main reason for posting was in defense of moderators who may not be quite as zealous as some might want them to be.

Nathaniel.Mossiblov

6079_Smith_W wrote:

@ Nathaniel Mossiblov

My personal feelings; I don't consider myself anti-Marxist. Someone is a Marxist? Not my concern.

I should add that my main reason for posting was in defense of moderators who may not be quite as zealous as some might want them to be.

I understand you. I think that people were a little too harsh on the OP. I skimmed over it as well as the site, and while some articles go too far even a stopped clock is right twice a day.  I won't go so far as to defend anything over on that site, or even defend this one article.  But I think the general topic, "cultural capitalism" does present one or two ideas at least worthy of discussion.

Number 1, with regard towhat the author called "cultural Marxism," it's indeed true that it was an attempt to apply Marxism to cultural Analysis. Classical Marxist thought is primarily economic, and concerns itself with developing the "dictatorship of the proletariat" to drive forth a revolution of the masses. What Horkheimer thought was different from the Soviet line in that he thought because the Western European countries were relatively prosperous, revolution couldn't come from the proletariat. Because of that they made cultural "superstructure", rather than economic "substructure" the focus of the Frankfurt school's work.

Number 2, In regards to "cultural Capitalism" I think what was really meant is the ideas like consumerism, consumption, commercialism and the like.  And it's also not really "wrong" to point out that third-world countries face a lot of problems because of capitalist-cultural-imperialism.  For instance you have entire indigenous peoples whose way of life have been threatened due to the encroaching of the industrial world into their traditional living spaces, then forcing them to come into cities where they don't have any real prospects.

In short I do think that cultural Capitalism is problematic, just not the same way that the author of that article thinks.

 

6079_Smith_W

Yes, evidently the OP either had a clear intent, or didn't read far enough. I am sure we have all seen enough examples of both. 

epaulo13

“The Myth of Normal”: Dr. Gabor Maté on Trauma, Illness and Healing in a Toxic Culture

quote:

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Dr. Maté, could you elaborate on what you’ve been talking about now, namely the relationship between individual — the effects of an individual and social trauma? You said in a recent interview, quote, “Being left with an emptiness and insatiable craving creates addiction in the personal sense, and capitalism in the social sense.” And both these are taken to be coping mechanisms for the experience of trauma. If you could explain?

DR. GABOR MATÉ: Well, let me give you a more simple — I will answer to that question, but let me give you first a simpler example of social trauma and illness. So, it’s been well shown that the more experiences of racism a Black American woman has to endure, the greater her risk for asthma. In other words, the constriction of her airways and the inflammation of her airways are the physiological product of a social malaise. Now, who’s got the pathology here? Society or the individual? Can we even make a separation between the two? We know that if you look at the markers of aging, various biological markers of aging, they are much more advanced in Black people the same age as their Caucasian cohorts simply because of racism, because social stress and trauma translate into the physiology of the individual. You can’t separate the mind from the body. And you cannot separate the individual from the environment.

In Canada, where I live, an Indigenous woman — by the way, Indigenous people used to have no autoimmune disease whatsoever prior to colonization. Today, an Indigenous woman in Canada has six times the risk — six times the risk — of rheumatoid arthritis. And the same thing is true in the United States, by the way, that autoimmune disease strikes especially women, and especially women of color, in much higher rates. These reasons have nothing to do with genetics, and everything to do with social trauma.

Now, the emptiness that you refer to, in a society that tells you that you’re not enough, that you’re not good enough, that you don’t look good enough, that you don’t have enough, that you don’t own enough, that you haven’t attained enough, creating this sense of emptiness is the fuel that runs the consumer society, where never is there enough. You always have to have more and more. You have to attain more and more, obtain more and more. So, basically, it’s a highly addictive culture that feeds off people’s addiction to drive its profits.

And they do so quite deliberately. When it comes to the food industry, for example, you probably remember this book a few years ago, Salt Sugar and Fat, where the food companies very deliberately try to identify, using sophisticated neuroscience, the sweet spot, the bliss spot, that when you have the right combination of salt, sugar and fat in your junk food, that’s what gets people addicted. So that the digital companies employ what’s called neuromarketing. They try and find what’s the best way to excite the circuits in the brain of the customer that gets most addicted in order to get them hooked on their products.

What we’re looking at here is the mass engineering of addiction. And we’re not talking conspiracy theory. This is conspiracy reality. That’s how it works. But, of course, from the point of view of profit, it works, because people are going to buy junk foods, that are going to kill them or make them ill. But these companies don’t care. They just want — it’s not that they’re trying to kill you, as I say in one chapter of the book; they just don’t care if you die, because what really matters is profit. So, this society runs on people’s sense of deficient emptiness, where more and more is what they think is needed to fill that hole inside themselves....

epaulo13

..more from above.

quote:

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Dr. Maté, if you could also talk about another aspect, another way in which society might exacerbate individual trauma? You talk in the book — you’re critical in the book about this idea that people should simply push through it, this idea of resilience. What are the effects of that orientation towards trauma? And if you could link it also with what you’ve just said about the way in which the medical establishment and Western medicine understands the question of psychic wounds?

DR. GABOR MATÉ: The average medical student — how the medical system deals with trauma is that it doesn’t. The average medical student does not get a single lecture on the relationship between trauma and physical or mental illness, despite the voluminously documented evidence. So there’s this huge gap between our science and what we practice, so that so many physicians have to figure this out after they leave medical school. They have to figure it out on their own, because nothing in their training prepared them for it. As a matter of fact, their own training is often so traumatic in itself, and their own traumas are not dealt with, that they’re just not prepared to deal with the traumas of their patients. It’s just a subject that’s almost completely ignored across the practice of medicine.

Now, in terms of the “get over it” and resilience aspect, there’s a beautiful story, or truth, that my friend, Dr. Lewis Mehl-Madrone, who has a Lakota Sioux background, a psychiatrist and physician — and Lewis Mehl-Madrone told me — and he’s an author, as well. And he told me that in the Lakota tradition, when somebody gets ill, the community says, “Thank you. Your illness represents some dysfunction in our whole community, because we are not separate. Your body is not separate from your mind, and your mind is not separate from the rest of our minds. We co-create each other. So your illness represents some dysfunction, some imbalance in our whole community. So your healing is our healing. How can we support you?” That’s the traditional Indigenous way of looking at human beings, which modern science, by the way, has more than amply validated, but which modern medicine still ignores.

So now the onus is not just on this individual to get over it. It’s actually — resilience is seen as a communal endeavor and as a communal attribute. And when you isolate people, atomize them, you make them feel guilty or weak for their illness, and tell them to get over their trauma, you’re just shaming them more, you’re isolating them more, and you’re entrenching them more in a traumatic imprint. What people need is community, contact, compassion, safety. That’s what allows people to work through their traumas. And unfortunately, that’s not really available.....

epaulo13

..finally.

quote:

AMY GOODMAN: The title of your book, Dr. Gabor Maté, is The Myth of Normal: Trauma, Illness, and Healing in a Toxic Culture. So, why don’t we end with that question of healing, both individually and as a society?

DR. GABOR MATÉ: Yes. So, healing, again, if you look at the word origins, which I often do, comes from a word for wholeness. So healing actually is a movement towards our wholeness. Now, if trauma is a split from ourselves, for example, a split from our bodies, as in the case of V, who had to disconnect from her body to survive her childhood, then healing is that reconnection with ourselves. And if trauma is not the terrible things that happened to us, but trauma is the wound that we sustained and are carrying, that’s a very positive message, because it means that that wound can be healed at any time. You see, if the trauma is what happened to me, now 77 years ago, that my mother gave me to the stranger, that will never not have happened. But if the trauma is what I made it mean, the wound that I sustained, that I wasn’t a lovable, worthwhile human being, that wound can be healed at any moment in all of us.

So the last and longest section of the book explores what we called pathways to healing, or pathways to wholeness. That’s the meaning of healing. There are many different pathways. There’s no one size fits for all. It needs to begin with the recognition that how we’re living and how we are relating to ourselves and others is not healthy. It may be the norm in this culture, but it’s neither healthy or natural, and there are better ways. And the same thing is true for our culture. And the essential first step is what I call being disillusioned. Now, people usually think of disillusionment as discouraging and somewhat negative. No. Would we rather be illusioned or disillusioned? Would we rather see the world through rose-colored glasses, not seeing what’s in front of us, or would we rather deal with reality the way it is? In the final chapter, I quote James Baldwin, the great, great James Baldwin, who said that not everything that’s faced can be healed, but nothing that’s not faced can be healed.....