Consumption, Signs, and the Displacement of Politics in Contemporary Society
Introduction: Why Does the Worker Vote Like the Employer? In a recent political debate in the United States, a question emerged that was as simple as it was unsettling: how is it possible that a Starbucks employee votes the same way as the CEO of Starbucks? Formulated with visible bewilderment, the question points to a paradox that seems to challenge the traditional categories of social analysis. If the interests of workers and employers are structurally opposed, why do they not translate into divergent political choices? Why, instead of conflict, do we find convergence? Perhaps the difficulty lies not in the answer, but in the way the question itself is framed. The Classical Framework: Class, Interest, and Consciousness From the perspective of Karl Marx, society is organized around its mode of production. Economic relations—the so-called “base”—condition political, legal, and ideological forms. Within this framework, social classes are defined by their position in the produc...