Here's what I wrote about my first experience in culture jamming, back in 2001. I did it one other time, in 2002 in a different fashion. I'm sorry to say I could do it again...things haven't changed.
(Understand that this e-mail was originally targeted for the teachers in my district, thus the ending paragraphs.... Also, I had to edit out the line breaks because I pulled it from an old e-mail and I don't have a text scrubber, other than myself, handy.)
Last year, on Black Friday, I arrived at the King of Prussia Mall around 6:30 AM and sat on a round concrete object whose purpose was, for allI could tell, to be a round concrete object. But is served well enough as a bench, and so I sat upon it. In my right hand was a large, two sided sign, some 21X 37''. The sign asked a simple question, "What do you need?" All I wanted to do was sit there the whole day and ask this question. I had heard my president, in a post 9/11 speech tell us that America had to get back to business, and that we shouldn't be afraid to do the things Americans do, like shop. (That's almost a quote, but not quite.) That turned my stomach. Being an American means a hell of a lot more to me than shopping and I'll be damned if I'll let any president, democrat or republican, insinuate that part of my expression of patriotism should be to shop. So there I sat. About 15 minutes later four mall security men stood like the famed "four horsemen" in front of me asking me what I was doing. Well, after no discussion whatsoever, I was told that if I wanted to take up my case with the police, they would be happy to oblige me. ('Seems I was trespassing on private property.) So I asked if I could talk to someone about what I could do. They directed me to the mall manager. Well, I took my big sign and, quite happily, walked into the mall, searching for the manager. When I found him, I asked if I could sit with my sign. He said I could not, that if they allowed me to do so, they would have to allow everyone who was soliciting to do so. I pointed out that I was not soliciting. He still said no. I said, "What if I just stand outside and ask the question to all the people who walk by?" He said I couldn't do that. "What, I'm not allowed to ask a question?" I said. "No," he replied, "it ruins their shopping mood."
I want to note here that I am not against consuming things...I'm not against buying things. I fully understand the integral part I play as a consumer in this country. However, as an American I represent less than 5% of the world's total population (according to 1999 estimates), but I am part of a world minority which consumes over 20% of the world's natural resources. I have a problem with that. When we buy simply because we are told to, when we buy because it makes us feel good, when we buy because we are, consciously or not, trying to fulfill some image, then we are blind consumers, and we are robbing wealth from the rest of the world for our own indulgences. My conscience leads me to believe that there is something wrong with that. To buy just because I can and because I want/desire to...there's something wrong with that. Even Christmas has been changed by these market forces. What was once a celebration of the hope and joy represented by Jesus Christ (and you don't have to believe in the Bible to understand the mythic import of hope and joy to a civilization), has been perverted into the hope and joy that buying can bring. One joy is existential, other worldly, and nourishment for the soul. The other is ephemeral; it disipates like breath in a chill wind.
What's more is that as educators, we are in a perfect position to get students to question their consumption, to question the cultural forces at work that mold them into the kind of blind consumers whose idea of a good time is a day out at the mall. Henry A. Giroux, Penn State professor of secondary education, writes that "if democracy is to carry us forward into the next century, surely it will be based on a commitment to improving the lives of children, but not within the degrading logic of a market that treats their bodies as commodities and their futures as trade-offs for capital accumulation. . . . Critical educators . . . need to create a cultural vision and a set of strategies informed by 'the rhetoric of political, civic, and economic citizenship.'"
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