Consumerism Essay

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    In this week’s “Working with Evidence”, the primary focus was on globalization, which is the process of businesses or other organizations developing international influence or operations on an international scale, after World War II. Based on the provided six images and the text of Chapter 23, it presented different ways various groups of people experienced globalization since the end of World War II. To begin, visual source 23.1 (‘Globalization and Work’) shows a Chinese-owned company producing

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    1. According to Foucault, what’s the intended impact of the panopticon on individuals? The intended impact of the panopticon is to create a sense of vigilance on individuals that would make them think twice before committing a crime like they would be under a state of mind that they are always being watched. 2. How does the image of the panopticon help describe how power works? The image of the panopticon helps describe how power works because there is a person in the middle watching everything while

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    Today's society is fueled by marketing and consumerism, which is detrimental to our environment. Throughout the novel Feed, M.T Anderson uses a futuristic society as an scathing indictment of our current consumer habits. This is best demonstrated by the use of multiple related themes. Many abrasive marketing techniques used by multinational conglomerates are designed to prey on middle and working class consumers. Thus creating a higher demand for product manufacturing. This higher demand in return

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    Many economic, social, and political ideas and events shaped the 1920’s. For example, an economic idea was the concept of consumerism, a social idea was flappers, and a political event was the 18th Amendment. The 1920s created a carefree lifestyle so Americans would have fun, let loose, and forget all the hardships they had to go through during the war. The concept of consumerism was an economic idea that shaped the 1920’s. This period was one of mass production which created low prices. People wanting

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    becoming liberated. As a result, many tried their hand at writing. The writing of female authors during the 1920s was immensely influenced by American society. The 1920s was a decade of prosperity and change. The decade brought about a growth in consumerism and the

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    But in the realms of consumerism this time period saw many revolutions. The television made it very easy for people to receive information the television was considered to be a luxury by 1955 almost every home in America had a television set. This led to an increase in TV stations the number of stations on air went from 16 in 1948 to 254 in 1954. Any type of content was able to be consumed at anytime. There also the the credit card this was a leading factor of the consumerism. Now things could be

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    Capitalism started up as a system of investing and sharing money in order to increase the value of resources in the future. Capitalism was just an economic system, but then soon turned into a complex system of ethical practices. Harari defines capitalism as, “a set of teachings about how people should behave, educate their children and even think” (Harari 314). This economic system evolved along with the people that were endorsing it. Capitalism enables the rich to get richer, while the poor continue

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    Huxley heavily focuses on the somber effects on mass production in order to forewarn readers to not take part in it, as it only had negative outcomes. Along with mass production, consumerism plays a central idea in Henry Ford’s era and in Mond’s World State, and Huxley analyzes how overbearing leaders who enforce consumerism create false happiness for the consumers. Similar to Ford’s philosophies, Mustafa Mond focuses on controlling citizens by regulating their goods. Ford and Mond both strive have

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    Rick Deckard Symbolism

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    In his novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, Philip K. Dick criticizes American mass consumerism by commodifying human existence. Precisely, Dick characterizes Rick Deckard and his wife, Iran, as individuals who rely on the mood organ and the ownership of animals to define their lives. It is evident that Deckard and his wife exemplify the archetypal consumer’s inability to individualize when these characters’ experiences are determined by the mood setting to which they dial in their mood organ

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    They knew that growing consumerism and advertising went hand in hand, so they began to advertise everywhere that they could. Even the appearance and bodies of their employees were used for means of marketing. In the last part of the book, the author talks about small retailers and

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