The consumer society

 
Bookmarked Notes on Jean Baudrillard, The Consumer Society (1970) by Rob (Marginal Utility Annex)
Baudrillard’s basic premise in The Consumer Society is that the logic of exchange value in consumption has rendered all activities equal

“When we consume, we never do it on our own (the isolated consumer is the carefully maintained illusion of the ideological discourse on consumption). Consumers are mutually implicated, despite themselves, in a general system of exchange and in the production of coded values.”

— Jean Baudrillard

See also: How we feel about what we consume

Performing yourself on social media

The draw of the herd

The vulnerability of having taste

 

The world of goods treats consumers as a group in order to classify them into different statuses, but the individuals within the group feel no collective impulse; have no sense of being a part of a group – so the process is impervious to collective resistance.

See also:

Packaging people for corporate consumption

Preserving our rights from corporations

Finding enough together

 

Meta note: I’m never clear what of older theory remains worth reading, but also, what I’m interested enough to read. It is here I feel my lack of liberal arts background — I’m taking notes of references to older works, so if one seems to come up again and again I can check it out. That’s what has me interested in McLuhan for media, but I might also be interested in exploring deeper the literature on culture.

Tracy Durnell

06 May 2024 at 05:07

Theft of the land

 In his latest book Local, Alastair Humphreys visits the suburbs, exurbs, and industrial-rural lands surrounding his home, encountering plenty of litter. At first, he’s disgusted and thinks poorly of those who’ve tainted their environment. People he encounters blame the Travelers, saying that because they don’t own the land they don’t treat it well. But after meeting some friendly Traveler kids, he reflects a bit deeper: is burying the litter in a shared pit, as landfills are, really so much better?

And while the litter is the most visible damage done to the landscape, what about all the invisible damages — chemical pollutants despoiling the water, emissions befouling the air — done to the land by those who own it in the name of industry? What about the ecological destruction caused by intense sheep-grazing methods, which has become invisible due to shifting baselines? Owning the land is no guarantee someone will care for it, in fact is justification for the extraction of resources from it.

The presence of a discarded liquor bottle is more obvious than the absence of birds that might have lived there. Pollution and ecological “cold deserts” are much worse environmental harms than a candy wrapper or a soda bottle, but because we can see them, we get more upset about litter. It’s easier to explain away the other damages for having a “virtuous” (in the modern sense) cause: making money. Nor do we demand those land owners clean up their messes, restore the damages they’ve done.

In the Seattle area, the Duwamish River has been polluted and damaged in all ways — litter clogs the shores, chemicals bioaccumulate in the fish, its channel has been constrained and flood plain cut off. Local volunteers are doing the physical cleanup of the litter; the EPA will soon complete a cleanup of the contaminants at the Superfund site, and locals worry that once the river is nice again, they’ll be priced out of the area. They’re asking that planning start to ensure the community that lives there can stay: “While the [EPA] has developed guidance for environmental justice best practices in its public engagement, it hasn’t implemented a strategy that helps to hold physical space for affordable housing or community-oriented development.”

Is it environmental justice if you clean up the chemicals that have been harming the locals but then let them be immediately driven out so someone else benefits?

When the Maui fires happened last year, all of us were thinking it: this is going to be a massive landgrab for haoles. Even the President mentioned that the government wasn’t going to let that happen. I haven’t seen any followup reporting on how successful that effort was 🤞 (Looks like they’re cracking down on illegal AirBnBs?)

Antonia Malchik highlights the primacy of land ownership in the modern world:

In their book The Prehistory of Private Property, authors Karl Widerquist and Grant S. McCall repeatedly go back to the main difference that they see in a private property society versus one where private ownership of, say, land, much less water and food, is unknown: freedom to leave. That is, if you want to walk away from your people, or your place, can you do so and still support yourself? Can you walk away and find or make food, shelter, and clothing? In non-private property societies, the freedom to walk away and still live just fine is the norm. In private property societies, it’s almost nonexistent. You have to work to make rent. Land-rent, you might call it. Someone else owns the land, and you have to pay to live on it.

And our system offers few protections for people’s right to have a home available to rent: instead, we shrug and say the market will take care of it, while zoning for single-family detached units and requiring excessive parking minimums. (It says a lot about a society when we’re more anxious to have free parking than enough housing.)

 

See also:

Paying attention to the design of our spaces

Tracy Durnell

06 May 2024 at 02:03

How we feel about what we consume

 
Quoted That's Not How Stains Work by Anne Helen Petersen (Culture Study)
In the book, I draw on Mark Fisher’s thinking in the excellent book Capitalist Realism to talk about this impulse toward individual, consumer response. Because we are atomized individuals with no collective power, we are left with this single response: a grandiose yet ultimately meaningless sense of the importance of our purchases. -- Claire Dederer

This is interesting and fair, but in her larger point about consuming media by ‘stained’ people, I think overlooks our emotional responses to learning bad things about people whose art we liked. (Note: I haven’t read the book, only this interview.) It’s possible that we as individuals read too much into what we like, that we invest too much of our identity into corporate properties or even art by individuals, and that part of the harm we feel on discovery of harm is associative: that by enjoying something made by someone who did bad things, some of that badness must rub off on us. That the art is dirty, and enjoying it has sullied us.

Or it can trigger feelings of betrayal — that’s how I still feel about Warren Ellis, who I thought was (who portrayed himself as) “one of the good ones.” I feel visceral disgust at the idea of reading his newsletter again, no matter how much I enjoyed it before, and I boxed up my Transmet collection so I didn’t have to see it all the time. I’ve worked too hard at learning to pay attention to my emotions to dismiss them as invalid; I’m not going to gaslight myself that I’m overreacting.

 

See also:

The Conundrum of “Ethical Consumption”

You can’t unknow

Audience commodity

Tracy Durnell

05 May 2024 at 21:57

Scale requires deskilling

 
Replied to Adobe Throws Photographers Under the Bus Again: 'Skip the Photoshoot' by Jeremy GrayJeremy Gray (petapixel.com)
If Adobe has its way, its Firefly AI may essentially replace artists and make Adobe's platform a more attractive choice for enterprises.

Adobe’s gambling that the creative industries will be replaced by in-house staff doing it all themselves — and maybe it’s a “good” gamble if they can convince a lot of corporations they can cut out all the photographers and stylists and creative directors because any of their staff can do “the same” with a CC subscription. Maybe those staff are graphic designers, but maybe that duty’s just been rolled into their job description. For an indie designer like me, $100 a month is a real cost, but that’s nothing for a corporation. At this point I loathe giving Adobe money, but monopoly gonna monopoly them industry standards.

*PSA! If you use Adobe products and store anything in the cloud OR USE BEHANCE!!!, be sure to turn off content analysis, which they use to train our replacement Firefly AI.*

 

See also:

The dream of AI is the dream of free labor

Who does AI work for?

Will “good enough” AI beat human artists?

We need solidarity across creative industries

If the medium is the message, what do AI graphics say?

Tracy Durnell

05 May 2024 at 01:30

Weeknotes: April 27 – May 3, 2024

 It’s been two months since my surgery! My physical stamina is still a little low but my mental capacity seems pretty much restored.

Highlight of the week: we went to the rhodie garden!

Looking forward to: baking something with all the blueberries I have in the fridge… trying to decide between coffee cake and cobbler 🤔😋

Stuff I did:

  • worked on my consulting website — I’m bringing my portfolio in from Behance and making a bunch of case study pages — made a template and got two projects updated
  • headed down to the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden and took so many pictures 😂 dipped into the adjacent Bonsai Museum for a quick peek, too
  • lunch date with my husband — brought sandwiches from my favorite joint to a park overlooking downtown Seattle — also lemonade from a boba place, I tried wintermelon
  • worked on consolidating financial accounts — set up a rollover and moved some funds around
  • researched fee-only financial advisors and 😬 I get it, it’s not worth a professional’s time to sell me just a few hours of advice, but still, the cheapest starting rate I found locally was $3-5k — I’m going to list out all my questions and see if I can find answers in the Bogleheads forum
  • baked banana bread
  • one online appointment
  • met my friend for a sunny walk on the trail
  • watched the pilot episode of Fallout

Dinners:

  • roasted corn quesadilla + coke + refried beans
  • Thai takeout — eggplant with tofu + spring rolls + rice
  • Indian takeout — Tikka salmon + naan + rice
  • breakfast egg sandwiches
  • Mexican fusion takeout — potato quesadilla + chips and salsa
  • pappardelle pasta + jarred sauce + fresh basil + Caesar salad in a bag
  • refried beans with melted cheddar cheese + chips + sour cream

Reading:

Haven’t been in much of a reading mood this week.

  • Continued reading Come Together by Amelia Nagoski
  • Started reading Filterworld by Kyle Chayka
  • DNF’d Land of Milk and Honey by C. Pam Zhang, Unbound by Christy Healy, The Annual Migration of Clouds by Premee Mohamed, and Passing Strange by Ellen Klages

Words I looked up / concepts I learned:

New music I listened to:

Nature notes:

three deer in backyard
they were eating herb robert and the tender shoots of blackberries so we didn’t scare them off
  • Three deer — two males and a female — came and browsed the backyard one afternoon — one had stub antlers and the other just had dots
  • MY DOVE TREE FINALLY BLOOMED!!! (Okay, so there are four bracts, but that is more than zero 😄) I don’t remember what year we planted it but before COVID — it was probably 2-3 years old already then, and dove trees can take up to a decade to flower
  • I successfully used my binoculars (!) to spot a dove in the back 40 that I’m voting was a banded pigeon — I’m generally terrible at finding the bird I want to look at through them before it flies off but I caught a solid glimpse 😂
  • I installed the Merlin app and learned the really loud bird in my backyard is a house finch 🐦 (it was the only bird the app could discern over the freeway noise 😢 worst part of my house)
  • Heard a woodpecker in the front yard (probably the resident sapsucker since I saw fresh holes in the tree it likes? though we’ve seen pileated before too)
Tracy Durnell

04 May 2024 at 08:20

Hobbies are productive

 
Liked When I Became a Birder, Almost Everything Else Fell Into Place by Ed Yong (New York Times)
“Are you a retiree?” a fellow birder recently asked me. “You’re birding like a retiree.” I laughed, but the comment spoke to the idea that things like birding are what you do when you’re not working, not being productive. I reject that. These recent years have taught me that I’m less when I’m not actively looking after myself, that I have value to my world and my community beyond ceaseless production and that pursuits like birding that foster joy, wonder and connection to place are not sidebars to a fulfilled life but their essence.

I’m not a birder*, but I endorse this perspective that doing things that enliven you is important, even if no one else sees them as productive.

 

Further reading:

Devoted to wholeness instead of pursuing success by Nela Dunato

Rest is What Makes You a Person

The work is not enough

Adult Hobbies

Tracy Durnell

03 May 2024 at 01:56

Describe scents by mood

 
Bookmarked let's talk about SCENTS 🌹🥸🫒 by Kyle Raymond Fitzpatrick (The Trend Report™)
An interesting exercise is to describe a scent without using scent words—no smell references (e.g. this citrus scent smells... like mandarins). See where that gets you. Borrow from the world of emotions (is it uplifting or grounding?), textures (is it dense or airy?), temperatures (is it warm or cold?), imagery (what comes to mind?) -- Tracy Wan

My approach to scent descriptions is to choose honesty over accuracy.

— Tracy Wan

 

See also:

5-4-3-2-1 Sensory Details to Enrich Settings

Read The Museum of Scent

Obsession with scent

Tracy Durnell

02 May 2024 at 23:50

Spring at the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden

 
magenta azalea beneath tall maple
irresistible color for me
pink azalea shrub against the sky
epitome of spring
pink flowers with upward arching red stamens
I’m not usually an azalea gal but these caught my eye

We first visited the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden in June 2021, mostly missing the rhodies — but today we caught them! Even a week earlier, there would have been more — but there were still plenty to see, and cool foliage too. There was a super high pollen count today so I masked up but still got a headache 😕 I’m out of the habit of excursions so I was wiped by the time we got home 😄 But I’m glad we went anyway.

(Data warning: lots of photos! Also, lots of squeeing about plants! It’s my blog, not Instagram, so I’m not limited to ten photos, bwahaha)

moire bark of green and red
that BARK 😱 Acer davidii
sunlight shining through bright fresh leaves of a multi trunked tree
same species, another specimen… this tree is Good, damn — it also had darling red samaras — do I have room for a full size maple anywhere? 🤔
garden vista of mixed textures
(good tree again on the far right)
human for scale showing how tall all the shrubs are
he is over 6′ tall these plants are enormous
three rows of pink rhododendron flower bundles hemmed by large dark green leaves
I like how this plant made rows of flowers — also 👀 that pollen
panicle of purple rhododendron flowers from above, showing cute sepals
look at those adorable scalloped pink sepals 🥰
red stemmed new growth on a rhododendron bush, the new leaves yellow
wowza, the colors on this new growth are 🔥
leaflet stem with red scales
this new growth almost looks like tropical fruit!
hand beside oversized leaflet
I love a big leaf

tree stump and boulder sticking out of shrubbery

purple flower buds beneath bright green sprigs of new growth
I know you wanted a close-up on this guy
pink and white speckled tripetal trillium flower
😍😍😍 I have never seen trilliums speckled like this!
uniform mass of false lily of the valley leaves
dreamy, luscious Maianthemum dilatatum
black stained fluorescent green leaves and black and green striped bell flowers
holy shit talk about style, the cruella deville of the garden 🖤 how dare they not give me a species id on this… some sort of Arisaema
purple flowers strewn beneath bare rhododendrons
knocked loose by yesterday’s rain?
purple leaves and white fern fronds beside a brilliant green pondscape
mmm, I am a sucker for deep purples in the garden, also those white fern fronds look cool
underside of hanging blush pink rhododendron flowers
veiled by flowers
Tracy Durnell

02 May 2024 at 08:08

The rotating bookshelf art show

 bookshelf with three art prints in front of some of the books

A few weeks back, I did a print swap with Joe and now have finally gotten a frame for his cool riso print! I went with pink 😃 I’ve added it to my rotating bookcase gallery to start, and in a few months I’ll find it a more permanent home. It’s fun to showcase different art on my bookcase depending what I’m feeling — it’s a good spot for small art like some postcards I’ve framed, and I have a few seasonal prints I don’t want up year-round.

(The other two prints I have up currently are by Casey Weldon and Bao Pham.)

I lol’d at the “bookshelf wealth” home decor trend earlier this year because while I feel like I have a wealth of books I love or am excited to read, my comics probably aren’t impressing my professional contacts (this is in my Zoom background) and my bookcase is strained to (beyond 😅) capacity. Ironically, I think displaying art in front of some of the books might mellow it out by making some bigger visual blocks.

Tracy Durnell

02 May 2024 at 04:38



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