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Society of the Spectacle

Society of the Spectacle

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Author: Guy Debord
Publisher: Rebel Press
Category: Book

List Price: £6.99
Buy New: £3.90
You Save: £3.09 (44%)



New (30) Used (7) from £3.90

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 11417

Media: Paperback
Edition: New Ed
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 124
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 0.2

ISBN: 0946061122
Dewey Decimal Number: 320
EAN: 9780946061129
ASIN: 0946061122

Publication Date: January 1992
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new edition from the publisher. Sent from England the next working day.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Society of the Spectacle
  • Paperback - The Society of the Spectacle
  • Unknown Binding - Society of the spectacle
  • Hardcover - Society of the Spectacle
  • Hardcover - Society of the Spectacle

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  • Revolution of Everyday Life
  • The Practice of Everyday Life
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  • Illuminations
  • The Culture Industry (Routledge Classics) (Routledge Classics)

Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars society of the spectacular!   November 10, 2006
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

This book - in conjunction with some secondary literature and other NOT RANDOM situ texts - is one of the few which can come to revolutionise your perception ALL THE WAY DOWN. Of course : it is obscure and relies on a familiarity with alot of marxist terminology - but it bares, and demands, repeated readings which demonstrates how these concepts have alot of life in them! If I was to formulate its thesis then today it would be : you are always watching others do things instead of doing something which would exceed the gaze of another watching you. This is the road towards de-reification et al...


5 out of 5 stars Disconcertingly accurate statement of things in general.   November 8, 2001
 24 out of 31 found this review helpful

Don't let the other reviews put you off, this is a great book, although I've not read this translation. It's nothing as tedious as a critique of consumerism or the like - its a really revolutionary book. The surprise that such a thing can exist tends to disorientate its younger readers for a while.
Get it, read it, resist his tendency to overwhelm you with his impressive grasp of reality, and then go around feeling superior to everybody else while musing on how to overthrow the autonomous rule of our products, preferably in your lifetime. I recommend it.



1 out of 5 stars Personal helicopters   September 3, 2001
 7 out of 66 found this review helpful

To put things into perspective, this is a Guy (boom boom to you too, dewd) who reckoned everyone would have their own private helicopter by c. 1980 - prescient, huh?

Still, without TSotS Vaneigem's brilliant Revolution of Everyday Life could never have the resonance it does, so credit where it's due - and GD did invent pyschogeography as a discipline...


5 out of 5 stars A thorough-going deconstruction of modernity   August 1, 2000
 22 out of 26 found this review helpful

As trenchant as Foucault and as dogmatic as Wittgenstein, rarely has a work of political or cultural criticism provided such a thorough-going and penetrative exposition of the modern world's formulation of life as commodity. Debord's approach is refreshingly independent of conventional leftist thought, owing little to the positivist teleolgy of Marx of the ruralistic utopianism of Kropotkin. Though not without its faults, especially his sometimes confused and overly 'clever' prose, Debord's work is a true modern classic, a revolutionary text for the consumer age. Far from seeming dated it becomes more relavent with time - witness the growth of surrogate programming (gardening programmes, cooking programmes and 'fly-on-the wall' documentaries) of fabricated experience as commodity. I reccomend this book to anyone who feels bemused by the banality of everyday life.


5 out of 5 stars A truly SPECTACULAR piece of cultural theory (boom, boom!)   February 28, 2000
 23 out of 27 found this review helpful

Absolute genius. A lucid, miraculously acute dissection of the true nature of consumerism and commodity culture, which seems even more pertinent today, what with the ever-spiralling drive towards globalisation and the free market. Debord is wonderfully dogmatic, yet the cogency of his argument mean that we have no problem whatsoever in being spoonfed. But, be warned *THIS BOOK COULD CHANGE YOU LIFE* This book truly removes any blinkers, and exposes you to a world turned on it's head, mediated by this sinister, over-arching Spectacle. Also, from a literary point of view, it is very easy to become enmeshed in Debord's epigrammatical style, and certain passages need to re-read for full comprehension. As a result, THIS BOOK IS NOT FOR THE FAINT HEARTED, and is not, I repeat not, A LIGHT READ! Laid out as a compendium of ~200 theses, vaguely resembling a series of (ultra-cryptic!)crossword puzzles, it includes discussion of (to list but a few points) the cult of celebrity, out-of-town shopping cenntres, festivals, holidays et al. as well as a huge no. of more conventional topics for analysis (e.g. the proletarian class, time, urbanism, marxist discussion etc. etc.) So, overall, a brilliant elucidation of Situationist theory. It has changed the way I think, and it is no over-estimation to say the way I live as well. I just hope that Debord's masterpiece is re-discovered in a big way over the next few years REVOLUTIONISE EVERYDAY LIFE. LIVE WITHOUT DEAD TIME.