🛑 Labour and consumption have sth in common
In today’s economy, quitting your job isn’t just personal – it’s political.
Anthropologist David Graeber coined the term “Bullshit Jobs” to describe roles that feel meaningless even to those doing them – like box-tickers, taskmasters, and flunkies. These are often bloated by corporate bureaucracy and micromanagement, designed not for productivity but for appearances. (David Graeber, 2018)
The anti-work movement, once dismissed as laziness, now expresses a deeper critique: a rejection of alienation and the idea that our lives must be validated through paid labor. What started as a Reddit sub has become a cultural force. The pandemic and the “Great Resignation” only fueled it.
“It’s not about not working – it’s about not working for a system that doesn’t care.” (The Whitman Wire – Antiwork Isn’t Laziness)
At the same time, a growing anti-consumption trend challenges the ideology of endless buying. In academic circles, consumption is increasingly seen as a mechanism of control and identity-shaping – one that harms the environment and undermines autonomy.
“Conscious refusal to consume is a form of resistance.” (ResearchGate: Anti-Consumption)
💡 Takeaway
Labor is political. Consumption is too. As we question what kind of work and life is worth living, we must ask: What would a world beyond exploitation and accumulation look like?
🔗 Sources
- Graeber, D. (2018). Bullshit Jobs. Wikipedia
- The Whitman Wire: Antiwork Isn’t Laziness
- ResearchGate: Anti-Consumption and Consumer Resistance
- r/antiwork