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Sep 22, 2023 · Under a capitalist system, art is filtered through the lens of capitalism. Much of the media that we consume reinforces the perspectives and limitations that we are presented with.
Jul 5, 2021 · It's hard not to when so many people are struggling just to get by. Capitalism is an economic system, but it's also so much more than that. It's become a sort of ideology, this all-encompassing ...
- Rund Abdelfatah
May 11, 2020 · As Marx noted, capitalism has always been, even if destructively so, a creative project. For example, in a competitive market society, new commodities constantly have to be created to attract consumers. If consumption rates drastically fall, so does the rate of profit, and a systemic crisis is generated.
- Paul Michael Garrett
- 2021
Dec 17, 2019 · 2. Global Capitalism, Neoliberalism and the Art Market: Main Linkages. Since the 1970s and early 1980s, in response to the decay of Keynesianism, more active militancy of labor unions ,and attempts to democratization, there was a turn towards neoliberalism in countries such as the United States (Reagan), the UK (Thatcher) and Chile
Against a backdrop exploring the relationships between cultural democracy and nonprofit arts funding policies, this article describes the impact of unwritten arts funding policies that are manifest in tax breaks for individuals, foundations, and corporations as well as federal contributions to nonprofit arts organizations in the United States.
Oct 1, 2021 · Abstract. Apart from the longstanding and much-debated problem of art's commodification, how does neoliberalism transform and determine the conditions of artistic practice? Further, if neoliberalism is a substantially distinct stage in the history of capitalism, and not merely its intensification, what are the implications of this new condition for the practice and criticism of contemporary ...
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The transition to capitalism in the United States likely needs to be periodized as a two-and-a-half-century process, give or take. And by the late eighteenth century, while the speed at which capitalist relations were developing was starting to pick up, it is difficult to classify the United States, on the whole, as a “capitalist” or a non-“capitalist” country.