Repository logo
 

Workers-as-consumers: Rethinking the political economy of use-value and the reproduction of capital

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

No Thumbnail Available

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Mulcahy, Niamh 

Abstract

The relationship between the working class and consumer culture is undoubtedly contentious and often held as problematic in Marxist critical theory, owing to the exploitative nature of the mass production that facilitates consumption. Consequently, consumption sometimes appears as a distraction from the inequality perpetuated during the accumulation of capital, and thus as a social problem with normative undertones. As I reiterate in this article, however, workers are not simultaneously consumers because they have been inundated with consumer culture and advertising, but because they are separated from the means of production and must resort to exchange to reproduce their labour-power. As a result, they seek commodities as use-values, which is altogether different from a capitalist’s desire to realise exchange-value in the sale of commodities. This article is an attempt at examining the contradictions that arise in working-class interests in consumption, in order to illustrate why the act of consumption does not necessarily engender the continuous reproduction of capital, and thus of exploitation.

Description

Keywords

35 Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services, 3506 Marketing, 44 Human Society, 10 Reduced Inequalities

Journal Title

Capital & Class

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0309-8168
2041-0980

Volume Title

41

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
This work was supported by a Doctoral Fellowship from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, grant number 752-2014-0611.