the Edge and I are reading the same book

The friendliest place on the web for anyone that follows U2.
If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.

kobayashi

Rock n' Roll Doggie VIP PASS
Joined
Aug 16, 2001
Messages
5,142
Location
the ether
ohh, i can hear the yawns now: 'this didn't deserve it's own thread...'
i just read the transcript of Edge's chat and he's reading No Logo by CDN author(yay) Naomi Klein- http://forum.u2wdd.org/u2feedback/Forum11/HTML/000688.html
It's an incredible book for those that haven't heard of it.

------------------
i'm a reasonable man
get off my case

[This message has been edited by kobayashi (edited 10-10-2001).]

[This message has been edited by kobayashi (edited 10-10-2001).]
 
No, that's cool! I'd be happy if I was reading the same book as the Edge.
biggrin.gif
What is it about?



------------------
Be a world, child, form a circle
Before we all go under
 
I predict that book will become a best seller suddenly.
biggrin.gif


------------------
"But you take what you can get,
Cuz it's all that you can find,
But you know there's something more,
Tonight, tonight, tonight...
 
Originally posted by scatteroflight:
No, that's cool! I'd be happy if I was reading the same book as the Edge.
biggrin.gif
What is it about?
it's more or less an alert or wake up call warning of the commercial culture that is increasingly encroaching upon our daily lives.
klein approaches the concept in a unique way-she divides our world up into three spaces-commercial, private, and public. she then provides repeatedly convincing arguments that there is less and less of our public space. she also dips into the loosening of corporate laws that have enabled the aforementioned encroachment and other injustices such as sweatshops and job flights.
i'm reading it for a 3rd year mass communications course.


------------------
i'm a reasonable man
get off my case
 
Ahhh... have we touched upon the subject of postmodernism again...

makes me wish I was at ZooTV or POPMart...

------------------
"Lookin for baby Jesus under the trash..."
 
Hehe, I'm reading it too, stuck on chapter 5 for the last few weeks, its a very good book though, check it out if you can
 
You sit with him and share the book? What if he finishes reading first and he wants to turn the page? Or you do?

------------------
k e r c

La aventura del comienzo
La intriga de lo incierto
No temas y busca lo nuevo
S?lo empieza desde cero
 
Originally posted by kerc:
You sit with him and share the book? What if he finishes reading first and he wants to turn the page? Or you do?

the Edge and I are so tuned in together it's not a concern. our footsteps also fall at the same pace and pattern.

------------------
i'm a reasonable man
get off my case
 
LOL
biggrin.gif


------------------
k e r c

La aventura del comienzo
La intriga de lo incierto
No temas y busca lo nuevo
S?lo empieza desde cero
 
kobayashi,

I saw an interesting article in the Econonomist below that provides a counterpoint to Naomi Klein's book. May be helpful in your studies.

The case for brands
Sep 6th 2001
From The Economist print edition

Far from being instruments of oppression, they make firms accountable to consumers

IMAGINE a world without brands. It existed once, and still exists, more or less, in the world's poorest places. No raucous advertising, no ugly billboards, no McDonald's. Yet, given a chance and a bit of money, people flee this Eden. They seek out Budweiser instead of their local tipple, ditch nameless shirts for Gap, prefer Marlboros to home-grown smokes. What should one conclude? That people are pawns in the hands of giant companies with huge advertising budgets and global reach? Or that brands bring something that people think is better than what they had before?

The pawn theory is argued, forcefully if not always coherently, by Naomi Klein, author of ?No Logo?, a book that has become a bible of the anti-globalisation movement. Her thesis is that brands have come to represent ?a fascist state where we all salute the logo and have little opportunity for criticism because our newspapers, television stations, Internet servers, streets and retail spaces are all controlled by multinational corporate interests.? The ubiquity and power of brand advertising curtails choice, she claims; produced cheaply in third-world sweatshops, branded goods displace local alternatives and force a grey cultural homogeneity on the world.

Brands have thus become stalking horses for international capitalism. Outside the United States, they are now symbols of America's corporate power, since most of the world's best-known brands are American. Around them accrete all the worries about environmental damage, human-rights abuses and sweated labour that anti-globalists like to put on their placards. No wonder brands seem bad.


Product power or people power
Yet this is a wholly misleading account of the nature of brands (see special report). They began as a form not of exploitation, but of consumer protection. In pre-industrial days, people knew exactly what went into their meat pies and which butchers were trustworthy; once they moved to cities, they no longer did. A brand provided a guarantee of reliability and quality. Its owner had a powerful incentive to ensure that each pie was as good as the previous one, because that would persuade people to come back for more.

Just as distance created a need for brands in the 19th century, so in the age of globalisation and the Internet it reinforces their value. A book-buyer might not entrust a company based in Seattle with his credit-card number had experience not taught him to trust the Amazon brand; an American might not accept a bottle of French water were it not for the name of Evian. Because consumer trust is the basis of all brand values, companies that own the brands have an immense incentive to work to retain that trust.

Indeed, the dependence of successful brands on trust and consistent quality suggests that consumers need more of them. In poor countries, the arrival of foreign brands points to an increase in competition from which consumers gain. Anybody in Britain old enough to remember the hideous Wimpy, a travesty of a hamburger, must recall the arrival of McDonald's with gratitude. Public services live in a No Logo world: attempts at government branding arouse derision. That is because brands have value only where consumers have choice, which rarely exists in public services. The absence of brands in the public sector reflects a world like that of the old Soviet Union, in which consumer choice has little role.

Brands are the tools with which companies seek to build and retain customer loyalty. Because that often requires expensive advertising and good marketing, a strong brand can raise both prices and barriers to entry. But not to insuperable levels: brands fade as tastes change (Nescaf? has fallen, while Starbucks has risen); the vagaries of fashion can rebuild a brand that once seemed moribund (think of cars like the Mini or Beetle); and quality of service still counts (hence the rise of Amazon). Many brands have been around for more than a century, but the past two decades have seen many more displaced by new global names, such as Microsoft and Nokia.

Now a change is taking place in the role of brands. Increasingly, customers pay more for a brand because it seems to represent a way of life or a set of ideas. Companies exploit people's emotional needs as well as their desires to consume. Hence Nike's ?just-do-it? attempt to persuade runners that it is selling personal achievement, or Coca-Cola's relentless effort to associate its fizzy drink with carefree fun. Companies deliberately concoct a story around their service or product, trying to turn a run-of-the-mill purchase (think of H?agen-Dazs ice cream) into something more thrilling.

This peddling of superior lifestyles is something that irritates many consumers. They disapprove of the vapid notion that spending more on a soft drink or ice cream can bring happiness or social cachet. Fair enough: and yet people in every age and culture have always hunted for ways to acquire social cachet. For medieval European grandees, it was the details of dress, and sumptuary laws sought to stamp out imitations by the lower orders; now the poorest African country has its clothing markets where second-hand designer labels command a premium over pre-worn No Logo.

The flip side of the power and importance of a brand is its growing vulnerability. Because it is so valuable to a company, a brand must be cosseted, sustained and protected. A failed advertising campaign, a drop-off in quality or a hint of scandal can all quickly send customers fleeing. Indeed, protesters, including Ms Klein's anti-globalisation supporters, can use the power of the brand against companies by drumming up evidence of workers ill-treated or rivers polluted. Thanks, ironically enough, to globalisation, they can do this all round the world. The more companies promote the value of their brands, the more they will need to seem ethically robust and environmentally pure. Whether protesters will actually succeed in advancing the interests of those they claim to champion is another question. The fact remains that brands give them far more power over companies than they would otherwise have. Companies may grumble about that, but it is hard to see why the enemies of brand ?fascism? are complaining.
 
It's a brilliant book. Has a sort of underlying Canadian slant to it, which is really strange and nice at the same time. Basically deals with globalization, and the impact it has had on people around the world - the idea that the Third world exists for the comfort of the First. Very much a book I could envision Bono reading.
 
lance from n'sync saw the cover on his way to the magazines.
everybody look at the cover.

------------------
i'm a reasonable man
get off my case
 
Back
Top Bottom