Consumer Culture Essay

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Popular media such as magazines and television shows like Sex and the City and Nigella portray contemporary core feminist beliefs that can strongly impact the consumer culture of their target audience. A common trend, although represented differently in each medium, is how identity is expressed through consumer culture and the politics of consumption. This paper will investigate how media depicts and exploits the changing feminist identity through consumption and independence. Fundamentally, feminism is the theory of the political, economic, and social equality of the sexes (Merriam-Webster, 2016). It is an interdisciplinary approach to issues of gender equality, gender expression, gender identity, sex, and sexuality as understood through …show more content…

By representing fashion as an “exploitative consumer industry which limited women 's choice about who to be and encouraged them to think about clothing in terms of how other people perceived them” (Hollows, 2013, p. 9), Spare Rib tried to portray the idea of a responsible feminist consumer as active, informed, concerned, and conscientious. Spare Rib even went to the extreme and touched upon one of the key notions of this movement: disidentification from the identity of a housewife. In relation to food shopping, one of the main duties of a housewife, an article in Spare Rib in 1974 argued that “an attempt to remove responsibility for food shopping from the sexual division of labor by noting male partners’ equal participation in the work of the food co-op. [There are] joys of learning to shop at Spitalfields market, hunting for bargains and working co-operatively, divorcing responsible consumption practices from associations with asceticism and separating the pleasures of consumption from the role of the housewife” (Hollows, 2013, p. 10). While second-wave feminism included a disidentification from the identity of a housewife and domestic practices, post-feminism was characterized by capitalism, consumerism, and a decreased interest in politics and …show more content…

In Sex and the City, one of the main characters was paying $700 a month for a 600 square foot apartment in the exclusive Upper East Side of Manhattan. Now, such an apartment would go for triple or quadruple the price. Between the luxurious brownstone and the extremely expensive Manolo Blahnik shoes, the show highlights the unobtainable for many women. Although these consumer goods portray an image of a “hip urban feminist” to make the show more appealing, many women cannot afford the standard set by some of these shows. A more recent television show, Girls, is an example of the shift to the attainable. For example, one of the characters lives in a 250 square foot studio in a not extremely prominent area in Manhattan. However, this is much more realistic for many young people than the Upper East Side

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