|
No
Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies,
by Naomi Klein (Picador USA, 521 pp., $13.60, Paperback)
aomi
Klein, a critic of the global economy, is now on tour in New Zealand
and Australia. On Sunday, July 16, the Canadian author of No
Logo addressed a sold-out audience at the Atheneum Theater in
Melbourne.
In recent months,
Klein has become a rallying point for anti-corporate activists around
the world. As her book notes, "world leaders can't have lunch
together these days without someone organizing a counter-summit."
Her stardom has fed off these high-profile riots: If you're an anti-globalization
believer, No Logo is your bible.
Part autobiography,
part political-economic critique, Klein's book professes to take
on consumer culture by examining cultural and political reactions
to "corporate globalization."
Klein describes
how "the reign of logo terror" began for her when she
was just a wee girl, with a classmate who was obsessed with clothing
logos. Klein herself was seduced by a "deep longing for the
seductions of [the] fake" and wanted to "disappear into
[the] shiny, perfect, unreal objects" of the world of consumerism.
That longing
was not, however, simply a child's understanding of the world. Rather,
Klein suggests, it was part of a bigger scheme by global corporations
to entice consumers, by manufacturing the desire to consume products
with brand images.
In this weirdly
deterministic construction of the world — one which gives far too
much credit to the influence of corporate marketing on the average
person — consumers do not simply purchase a pair of tennis shoes,
a meal of meat and potatoes, or a cup of coffee. They buy such products
because of a brand — Nike, McDonalds, Starbucks — which allows them
to be part of something bigger than themselves, in what nearly amounts
to a brand religion.
In this alleged
corporate scheme, consumers are just victims, waiting for marketers
"to dream up new concoctions for industrial-strength Raid."
They — we — have bought into the imagined plastic world of Klein's
youth. Luckily, we have No Logo to expose the corporate conspiracy.
In No Logo's
parallel universe, the push for corporate brand identity is tied
up with the liberalization of international trade over the past
20 years. This lured corporations to shut down their domestic operations
(thereby eliminating job security for the workers of wealthy countries),
moving their operations overseas to the pejoratively labeled "sweatshops."
To collect
the obligatory anecdotes of oppression, Klein went to the Philippines
to visit such factories, which are just another part of the corporations'
scheme to profit from the workers' plight.
Yet Klein gives
little air time to the real exploitation perpetrated by oppressive
governments — or to the fact that utopian socialist schemes have
left their peoples impoverished, illiterate, and poor. For that
matter, Klein sees no difference between corporations and government:
Corporations "have grown so big they have superseded government,"
and things are only getting worse as a result. In poor countries,
she tells us, "the boss has just traded in his military uniform
for an Italian suit and an Ericsson cell phone."
Klein alleges
that everything in our culture and society — not just in the realm
of consumer products — has been despoiled by corporate branding.
"For the past decade," she says, "multinationals
like Nike, Microsoft and Starbucks have sought to become the chief
communicators of all that is good and cherished in our culture:
art, sports, community, connection, equality." This amounts
to a "war on public and individual space," where "virtually
nothing has been left unbranded."
All of which
has led to the recent backlash against corporations and international
trade. Klein suggests that corporations brought it on themselves
with the "corporate Achilles' heel" of brand images: "By
attempting to enclose our shared culture in sanitized and controlled
brand cocoons, these corporations have themselves created the surge
of opposition described in No Logo."
Klein's book accordingly examines the global movement against globalization
and trade. This discussion is important since they — and their protectionist
allies, such as North American labor unions — now seek to create
a global harmonization of labor and environment regulations. Driven
by the belief that international trade is only good for corporations,
they seek "mechanisms to make [corporations] answer to a broader
public" — ostensibly, representation of civil-society organizations
in such fora as the World Trade Organization. What could result
are arbitrary restrictions on international trade, the effect of
which will be to undermine everyone's economic freedom, and to slow
the economic and technological progress needed to raise living standards
in poor countries.
Consumers should
be offended at the message of No Logo. International trade
and economic integration improve our lives. We use brands — and
yes, even logos — to make informed decisions about the products
we use to fulfill our material needs. We would have far fewer choices
in Klein's "no logo" world, and all products would be
indistinguishable.
No Logo's premise is hardly unique. It simply confirms the
prejudices of those who already oppose international trade, wealth
and profit. It is far easier to attribute guilt — and cultural,
societal, and worldly ills — to a handful of evil corporations,
than it is to convince anyone that modern life itself could be the
root of such evils. In fact, Klein's parallel reality — where corporations
sell their products, and rule the world through subliminal messages
(an idea long ago disproved by psychologists) — is already a staple
of Hollywood movies. Take the recent Josie and the Pussycats.
Evil corporate executives use a teenage rock band to dictate teenage
consumer desires using subliminal messages. In the end, the corporate
executives self-destruct. No Logo seeks the same corporate
destruction.
But in doing
so, Klein and the Hollywood fantasists are ignoring the reality
— which is that lifestyles, working conditions, and material well-being
are getting better for everyone, not worse. Free trade is good for
everyone, not just for corporations. No one likes bullies, whether
they're for logos or against them.
And you have
to wonder, as someone asks on the No Logo web site: If her
success continues, will Klein become a branded person herself?
|