Sojourners has just posted a handful of articles on the topics of consumerism and “the simple life.” One is by big time Radical Orthodoxy guy William Cavanaugh, which looks particularly interesting.
A confession: it’s really easy for me to condemn consumerism in the abstract, but rejecting it in practice not so much. One way I justify my own purchases is their high-brow character. My weaknesses are for good books, good coffee, good scotch, etc. Not lowbrow stuff like Britney Spears CDs or Friends DVDs. There’s a reason, I think, that the phrase that appears in so much social criticism is “crass consumerism;” often there appears to be a certain class angle at work.
On the other hand, though, how do we distinguish good from bad consumption? Obviously there are economic justice and environmental concerns, but beyond that, the things of this world, including the artifacts of human ingenuity, should be enjoyed shouldn’t they?
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