Konsum und Gewalt: Radikaler Protest in der Bundesrepublik

Allbwn ymchwil: Llyfr/AdroddiadLlyfr

StandardStandard

Konsum und Gewalt: Radikaler Protest in der Bundesrepublik. / Sedlmaier, Alexander.
Berlin: Suhrkamp, 2018. 463 t.

Allbwn ymchwil: Llyfr/AdroddiadLlyfr

HarvardHarvard

APA

CBE

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Author

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Konsum und Gewalt

T2 - Radikaler Protest in der Bundesrepublik

AU - Sedlmaier, Alexander

PY - 2018/1/15

Y1 - 2018/1/15

N2 - Combining the tools of political, social, cultural, and intellectual history, Consumption and Violence: Radical Protest in Cold-War West Germany explores strategies of legitimization developed by advocates of militant resistance to certain manifestations of consumer capitalism. The book contributes to a more sober evaluation of West German protest movements, not just terrorism, as it refrains from emotional and moral judgments, but takes the protesters’ approaches seriously, which, regarding consumer society, had a rational core. Political violence is not presented as the result of individual shortcomings, but emerges in relation to major societal changes, i.e., the unprecedented growth of consumption. This new perspective sheds important light on violence and radical protest in post-war Germany, as previous books have failed to examine to what extent these forms of resistance should be regarded as reactions to changing regimes of provision. Continuing the recently growing interest in the interdependence of countercultures and consumer society, the focus on violence gives the argument a unique twist, making the book thought-provoking and engaging.

AB - Combining the tools of political, social, cultural, and intellectual history, Consumption and Violence: Radical Protest in Cold-War West Germany explores strategies of legitimization developed by advocates of militant resistance to certain manifestations of consumer capitalism. The book contributes to a more sober evaluation of West German protest movements, not just terrorism, as it refrains from emotional and moral judgments, but takes the protesters’ approaches seriously, which, regarding consumer society, had a rational core. Political violence is not presented as the result of individual shortcomings, but emerges in relation to major societal changes, i.e., the unprecedented growth of consumption. This new perspective sheds important light on violence and radical protest in post-war Germany, as previous books have failed to examine to what extent these forms of resistance should be regarded as reactions to changing regimes of provision. Continuing the recently growing interest in the interdependence of countercultures and consumer society, the focus on violence gives the argument a unique twist, making the book thought-provoking and engaging.

KW - consumption

KW - political violence

KW - Germany (West) history

KW - protest

KW - terrorism

KW - Red Army Faction

KW - Herbert Marcuse

KW - globalisation critics

KW - boycotts

M3 - Llyfr

SN - 978-3518427743

BT - Konsum und Gewalt

PB - Suhrkamp

CY - Berlin

ER -