MODERNITY AND CONSUMPTION
Theory, Politics, and the Public in Singapore and Malaysia
by Antonio L Rappa (National University of Singapore)
Table of Contents (38k)
Preface (75k)
Chapter 1: Modernity (170k)
The Enlightenment theorists involved in the public/private debate exposed the logical fallacies of theology and the philosophical weaknesses of metaphysics but left little room for understanding contemporary modes of consumption. What does it mean to be a consumer in the early 21st century? Do modern markets provide real choices for consumers in neoliberal capitalist democracies? Or are consumers ironically slaves to their own patterns of consumption? Rejecting Habermas' conceptualizations in The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere (1991), Rappa offers an examination of modernity and consumption with a non-Marxist, modernity-Resistance-theoretical frame (mRf). He argues that late modernity — the ethos, experience, and consciousness of global and technological transformation today — is not about the fusion of "public and private" spaces. Rather, modernity and consumption involves the deep penetration of private space by public space to the extent that private space becomes dependent, conditional, and decrepit. The "Private" has become contingent on the "Public". Decisions about what to consume no longer reflect the mindful choices of private, interest-seeking, and wealth-maximizing individuals but reveal a new kind of public control through foundational images of success, failure, horror, violence, and hope.
Contents:
- Modernity
- Consumption
- Singapore:
- Consuming
Singapore
- Family and Education
- Narrative and Public Space
- Malaysia:
- Consuming Malaysia
- Family and Education
- Narrative and Public Space
- Consumption and Its Discontents
Readership: Undergraduate and graduate students in political science,
sociology, management/business and philosophy, as well as general readers.
"Modernity and Consumption constitutes an important extension and application of the work of such theorists of late modernity as William Connolly, Stephen White, Gianni Vattimo, and Wendy Brown."
Aryeh Botwinick Professor of Political Science Temple University |
"An intriguing exploration of the impact of global and technological transformation on the relationship between public and private space, and the ways in which the former has intruded on the latter, particularly in market consumption choices. Private space in late modernity turns out to be highly contingent and ephemeral, and thus requires us to reassess its boundaries and political significance."
Joel B Grossman Professor of Political Science Johns Hopkins University |
"Modernity and consumption, Antonio L Rappa argues in this insightful book, are deeply political. This book's unique contribution is to develop that argument with respect to the 'depoliticized' consumer in Singapore as well as the 'politicized' consumer in Malaysia. A significant contribution that melds theory and data in new ways."
Peter J Katzenstein Walter S Carpenter, Jr. Professor of International Studies Cornell University |
| 288pp |
Pub. date: Apr 2002 |