The question is really whether or not society should be turned into a massive exchange of commodities, or whether society has always been a massive exchange of commodities. Literature is just one aspect. Look at the Chinese version of "The Bachelor", where the girl said she'd rather cry in a Mercedes than laugh on the back of a bike. Look at how universities are dropping program after program in the humanities. Look at the values (or lack thereof) of the majority of humankind.
I'm not sure what the reasons are. Is it perhaps a natural result of overpopulation that the survival instinct kicks in and goes into overdrive? Is the way that technology has increased the speed of life a factor in the death of art and high culture? Have people always been this way (as Cicero liked to bemoan: o tempora! o mores! ) ?
My personal opinion (without denying the validity of any of the questions) is as follows: increased global competition has contributed to materialism, just as increased global advertising has. More people realize that they "lack" more things than ever before, and the imminent collapse of revealed religions has made the traditional impediments to materialism ineffective (Muslim extremism and Christian fundamentalism are acts of desperation). Western culture has, for several generations now, fostered a level of egotism and immature self-centrism that has spread like a cancer around the world.
If the reduction of all human activity to economic transactions continues at this pace, the reaction will become more intense and destructive. This reaction will not be Marxist, because Marxism, like capitalism, places an undue emphasis on economic activity. Rather, it will manifest as a rejection of material culture, a rejection that many may say is long overdue.
People need to put more emphasis on what they think, what they do, where they go, what they experience and how they interact, rather than with what they have. Note that the rise of materialism goes hand in hand with the retreat of individuals into the cyberspace of the Internet.
The problem is that, in the absence of revealed religions, it is up to each individual to find the discipline and moral strength to reject the reduction of all activity to a monetary sum. It is up to the individual to meditate or commune or pray, to share ideas, to engage in the cultural debate, and to live up to their potential. Each individual must become a mature adult, rather than a spoiled child. Is that easy? No. It is hard. The axiomatic conclusion is that most will fail. The sad epilogue to that failure is that harsh and childlike dogmas will replace this amorphous moral state, and harsh dogmas always lead to suffering and death.
I'm not sure what the reasons are. Is it perhaps a natural result of overpopulation that the survival instinct kicks in and goes into overdrive? Is the way that technology has increased the speed of life a factor in the death of art and high culture? Have people always been this way (as Cicero liked to bemoan: o tempora! o mores! ) ?
My personal opinion (without denying the validity of any of the questions) is as follows: increased global competition has contributed to materialism, just as increased global advertising has. More people realize that they "lack" more things than ever before, and the imminent collapse of revealed religions has made the traditional impediments to materialism ineffective (Muslim extremism and Christian fundamentalism are acts of desperation). Western culture has, for several generations now, fostered a level of egotism and immature self-centrism that has spread like a cancer around the world.
If the reduction of all human activity to economic transactions continues at this pace, the reaction will become more intense and destructive. This reaction will not be Marxist, because Marxism, like capitalism, places an undue emphasis on economic activity. Rather, it will manifest as a rejection of material culture, a rejection that many may say is long overdue.
People need to put more emphasis on what they think, what they do, where they go, what they experience and how they interact, rather than with what they have. Note that the rise of materialism goes hand in hand with the retreat of individuals into the cyberspace of the Internet.
The problem is that, in the absence of revealed religions, it is up to each individual to find the discipline and moral strength to reject the reduction of all activity to a monetary sum. It is up to the individual to meditate or commune or pray, to share ideas, to engage in the cultural debate, and to live up to their potential. Each individual must become a mature adult, rather than a spoiled child. Is that easy? No. It is hard. The axiomatic conclusion is that most will fail. The sad epilogue to that failure is that harsh and childlike dogmas will replace this amorphous moral state, and harsh dogmas always lead to suffering and death.
The only thing I would quibble about is "material culture." I view that through the lens of a cultural historian and it doesn't fit well with what you're discussing. I would agree that a culture of materialism (a very different thing) would be an anathema to those who hate the thought of the world being reduced to transaction cost/profit.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
E-books, piracy, and the commodification of literature
08/12/2010 02:31:00 AM
- 1199 Views
So we shouldn't just hook up writers to huge hamster wheels and force them to write and run?
08/12/2010 04:58:16 AM
- 1254 Views
I agree with most of what you say, Tom
09/12/2010 03:16:48 AM
- 840 Views
Let us say "materialistic culture".
09/12/2010 03:30:39 AM
- 838 Views
That'll work
09/12/2010 03:41:18 AM
- 742 Views
I think that the idea of "the commodification of literature" is one that is flawed
08/12/2010 07:53:50 AM
- 963 Views
Discussions of ebook piracy are largely irrelevant until more people use e-readers.
08/12/2010 10:41:40 AM
- 836 Views
E-piracy is a symptom, not a cause
09/12/2010 03:22:05 AM
- 816 Views
Uhm, or they just want to read and can't afford to spend money on books?
10/12/2010 05:56:53 PM
- 710 Views
Re: E-books, piracy, and the commodification of literature
09/12/2010 03:46:39 AM
- 805 Views
Sorry...as soon as you said you injected Marxist ideas into it I had to stop reading...otherwise
19/12/2010 06:10:12 AM
- 751 Views