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Culture Jamming by Kalle Lasn β€” book cover

Culture Jamming

by Kalle Lasn
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Overview

According to Kalle Lasn, publisher of Adbusters magazine, culture jamming will become to our era what civil rights was to the '60s, what feminism was to the '70s, and what environmental activism was to the '80s. Culture jammers are a global network of media activists who assert that America is no longer a country, but a multitrillion-dollar brand, built on a cult of celebrity and marketing brand names. These brands, products, celebrities -- the spectacles that surround the production of culture -- are our culture now. The architect of Buy Nothing Day and TV Turnoff Week, Lasn believes it is only by "uncooling" these symbols of culture, by organizing resistance against the institutions that manage the brands, that America can reassert herself. With cutting-edge design, this manifesto for the new millennium has the potential to completely alter the way we think and live.

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Editorials

Library Journal

For Lasn (publisher of Adbusters Magazine), "America is no longer a country but a multitrillion-dollar brand": the media and corporate greed, he argues, have hooked Americans on conspicuous consumption, turning vigilant citizens into hypnotized consumers. America's salvation lies with culture jammers, "a loose global network of media activists" whose activist program is to topple the system the book sets forth. Lasn provides lots of statistics on the harmful effects of television and advertising, but his arguments tend to rely more on intuition than proven facts. The media's pervasive influence on American culture cannot be denied, but it's not clear that its influence is as pernicious as Lasn claims. Still, while his urgent, sometimes sanctimonious tone may not convince anyone but the already-converted, Lasn's book raises important issues that deserve discussion. Recommended for public and academic libraries.--William Gargan, Brooklyn Coll. Lib., CUNY Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

An eloquent manifesto of anti-commercialism worthy of predecessors like Thoreau and Huxley. Kalle Lasn is the publisher of Adbusters magazine, and the launcher of campaigns like Buy Nothing Day and TV Turnoff Week. Lasn was raised in Germany and, like the Native American in Brave New World, was able to live beyond the soma cult of American corporate consumerism and its Big Brother of TV, which dictates our culture, fashions, even dreams. Spontaneity can only be won back by "demarketing your life" in order "to escape the consumerist script." Culture Jamming is what Lasn hopes will constitute America's second revolution. To the author, the colonies broke off from England's corporate control, only to enslave themselves in the McDonaldization of America (the label less of a country than of a brand name). Sure, this proposed revolution is formidable, but so were the civil rights and feminist struggles. Lasn is more optimistic than many cynical and ironic slackers, punks, and downsiders, because, after all, we did win a thirty-years war against the tobacco giants. Other corporations, from ecologically damaging polluters to media mind-polluters, can be defeated when they too are held criminally responsible. It took slick marketing and TV spots to beat the corporations at their own game, to make smoking "uncool." While the challenge of making the polluting BMW, fatty fast food, or porno-hyped Calvin Klein garments uncool will require a cultural awakening comparable to a hooker's breaking away from her pimp, Lasn gives us specific ways to participate in the "joy of jamming." If you get junk mail on the fax, send back a toner-breaking black piece of paper. When telemarketers call, say you'll callback at THEIR home. There are 32 b&w illustrations, not finished but wickedly effectiveβ€”such as the sketch of a bald Joe Camel on a hospital bed under the caption, "Joe Chemo." Organized, like Walden, by season, this is the best call to simplify and renew natural life since Thoreau and the American Renaissance.

Book Details

Published
July 27, 2000
Publisher
New York : Eagle Brook, c1999.
Pages
272
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780688156565

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