Description
Book SynopsisSocial Opulence and Private Restraint is a study of the place of the consumer and consumption in the political economy of British socialism, from its early-nineteenth-century origins, through ''New Times'' Marxism, to the consumer-focused New Labourism and political economies critical of consumerism that can be found in the late-twentieth and early-twenty-first-century Left. Noel Thompson identifies and explicates recurrent themes which cross the boundaries of the conventional periodisation of the history of British socialist thought; themes which illustrate the sustained nature of the multifaceted ideological challenge presented by the accommodation of the consumer within socialist political economy. This challenge necessitates an engagement with the character and priorities of a future socialist society. As such it touches on some of the key issues which socialists have confronted in pursuit of their vision of a good society: issues with a strong contemporary relevance such as the de
Table of ContentsIntroduction ; 1. On the cusp of abundance, socialist political economy, the consumer and consumption, 1800-50 ; 2. Socialist political economy and the growth of mass consumption, 1880-1914 ; 3. 'Punished by the attainment of their desires': Social democratic conceptions of consumption and the consumer in inter-war Britain ; 4. Conceptualising the consumer in an age of affluence, 1950-1970 ; 5. Social democracy and the apotheosis of the consumer, 1970-2010 ; 6. Gathering the fragments: critiquing the new consumerism, 1970-2010 ; 7. Retrospect and Prospect ; Bibliography