Consumption
Many critical scholars of consumption base their ideas on the works of Karl Marx who critiqued consumption in capitalist societies such that under capitalism the marketplace would produce a large quantity and variety of goods and services that would be bought and sold in the marketplace as opposed to being communally available to the very people that were engaged in producing them (Miller, 1987). Marx's term for this was "commodification" (Marx, 1894). Since the very producers (workers) did not own the result of their labor they would have to purchase (consume) the very commodities they produced. Marx also envisioned that goods and services would be treated as if they were living entities, whereas the labor to produce them would be bought and sold as if it was an inanimate component of production (Miller, 1987).
According to critics, the people that own the capital make up the rules and regulations of society (culture). Consumption is an effect of production. There is a division between the location of the actual production of goods and the ideas and ideology (culture) that drives the...
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