Anti-consumption in crisis

In Greece the transition from discontented European consumer society to deprived, post-crisis and austerity-laden, has had huge impacts on the people; but it has also prompted socially oriented alternative movements to adjust their identities in the face of shifting priorities: in the example explored below, for example, from cultural resistance to meeting basic needs. In doing so, one collective’s demonstration proved to offer a highly relevant model for alternative, sustainable, inclusive and affirmative forms of exchange and encounter, with multiple positive social effects. With the intensification of the refugee crisis in Europe – this model’s relevance is only like to grow; indeed there are already many such examples of solidarity and autonomy emerging; as the state-led social support fabric of cities is stripped bare by austerity policies, new inclusive forms of urbanism appear.

Investigating consumer-oriented activism, Andreas Chatzidakis and Pauline Maclaran present below this ethnographic film about Skoros, the anti-consumerist collective in Exarcheia, Athens that was established in 2008, right before the beginning of the Crisis. It runs a space where people can come and give, take, or give and take goods and exchange services without any expectations of reciprocity, and without using money. A series of interviews with members of the Skoros collective and its customers, show how the ‘free shop’ came into being on the margins of consumer culture offering an inherent critique of competition and scarcity, turning ‘one man’s waste’ into ‘another man’s treasure’. The video offers us insight into the collective’s experience of self organisation in the everyday realm of exchange, transforming a formerly negative experience of consumerism into one of community building and solidarity, from a worldview based on scarcity to one of abundance.

by Andreas Chatzidakis and Pauline Maclaran

Originally, Skoros emerged as a response to an increasingly commercialized and consumerist (Athenian) society. It represented an experimentation with doing things differently: by gifting, sharing, and exchanging; and by foregrounding the values of communality, degrowth, solidarity and social justice.

A few months after Skoros’ opening I was in Athens for my sabbatical research on forms of consumer-oriented activism and I enthusiastically joined the collective. Back then, it was rather easier to apply conventional critiques of consumerism, not least because Athens appeared conspicuously wealthier, a world-class consumer city. Shopping in super-sized malls and fredoccino-fuelled encounters became cultural norms, not searching for second-hand items or socialising with strangers in grotty-looking places. I remember, for example, observing people that would reluctantly enter, take an item and then insist on donating whatever they considered to be the equivalent market value. Skoros’ idea was too radical for them to grasp.

Of course there were also other visitors that refused to entertain the idea of Skoros. As Heracles explains in the documentary, they were those who brought and those who took too many things. Both were a “problem”, the former because they simply wanted to alleviate their middle-class guilt (as is the case in many charity shops); and the latter because they in effect promoted alternative over-consumption. “Limits” soon had to be imposed in respect to the maximum number of items one could both bring and/or take, a containing – yet somewhat contentious – solution.

Despite its problems, Skoros proved to be a very popular, and in this sense successful, place. As Nancy puts it, “this is something important that Skoros has achieved. Perhaps because it found itself in this area, in this location, as a neighbourhood shop and not within a squat or a social centre. It opened its doors to the neighbourhood, people walked in. In fact, many of those who came were people who had never done something like this before”.

But then came the Crisis, as Zoe explains: “It suddenly dawned upon us: “Resistance? To what exactly? Things are different now”. Put differently, the Crisis imposed a different kind of “here and now”, one focused less on trying to do things differently and more on urgency, a need to provide solidarity to an increasing number of people who were approaching and falling below the poverty line. Skoros’s critique of consumer needs became somewhat redundant. As a leaflet back in December 2011 wrote “…How can we insist that ‘we are not a charity’ when poverty is next to us, around and above us and it is growing massively? How to counterpropose solidarity and community when the crisis isolates individuals and makes them turn against each other?…” More recently, solidarity has also had to be channelled to the thousands of Syrian refugees who have reached the ports of Athens.

Throughout the crisis anti-consumption, as originally understood, was no longer relevant; it had to be re-evaluated and redefined. This film is produced and directed almost entirely by members of the collective, in an attempt to narrate the evolution of what seemed to be a rather simple idea.

The film is also about the power of people to exercise agency in the face of formidable socio-economic circumstances, it is about solidarity/ies, and the collective joys of doing things differently.

Written by Andreas Chatzidakis & Pauline Maclaran

Andreas Chatzidakis is Senior Lecturer in Marketing at the School of Management, Marketing and Centre for Research into Sustainability, Royal Holloway University of London. Pauline Maclaran is Professor of Marketing & Consumer Research in the School of Management at Royal Holloway University of London.

Research: Andreas Chatzidakis, Pauline Maclaran, Alexandros Korpas Prelorentzos

Project Supervision: Andreas Chatzidakis

Shot and directed by Athina Souli

Produced by Zoe Kanelopoulou

Executive producers: Andreas Chatzidakis & Pauline Maclaran

Sound operator: Giorgos Politakis

Edited by Stavros Symeonidis

Music Supervision: Elena Fornaro

Graphics: Lito Valiatza

Intervieweees (in order of appearance): Nancy Palta, Dora Kotsaka, Zoe Kanelopoulou, Elena Fornaro, Vanda Davetta, Heidi Zotika, visitor from Ghana, Lito Valiatza, Lila Kaniari, Babis Kavouras, Iraklis Panagoulis, Alexandros Korpas Prelorentz.

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