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The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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Citizens, Consumers, and the Good Society

Michael Schudson

University of California, San Diego, Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University

Advocating a "postmoralist" position in the analysis of consumer culture, this article holds that it is a mistake to identify political action with public-spirited motives and consumer behavior with self-interested motives. Both political behavior and consumer behavior can be either public-spirited or self-interested. Consumer choices can be expressly political and public-spirited, and styles of consumer behavior can enlist and enshrine values that serve democracy, from going to coffee-houses in eighteenth-century London to eating at McDonald's in twenty-first-century Beijing. Political behavior, meanwhile, may be a particular kind of consumer behavior, and political practice often turns out not to be public-spirited but egocentric and grasping. The article concludes with some suggestions for making political activity more like the experience of consumer choice, that is, more like a situation in which people can take their own preferences seriously because there is a reasonable prospect that they will ultimately matter.

Key Words: citizens • civic virtue • consumers • elections • McDonald's • politics • postmoralism

The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 611, No. 1, 236-249 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0002716207299195


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D. V. Shah, D. M. McLeod, E. Kim, Sun Young Lee, M. R. Gotlieb, S. S. Ho, and H. Breivik
Political Consumerism: How Communication and Consumption Orientations Drive "Lifestyle Politics"
The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, May 1, 2007; 611(1): 217 - 235.
[Abstract] [PDF]