Authenticity: Brands, Fakes, Spin and the Lust for Real Life

Authenticity: Brands, Fakes, Spin and the Lust for Real Life

by David Boyle (Author)

Synopsis

David Boyle guides us through the next big thing in Western living - the determined rejection of the fake, the virtual, the spun and the mass-produced, in the search for authenticity. The charms of the global and virtual future we were all brought up to expect, where meals would be eaten in the form of pills and machines would do all our work, have worn rather thin. It's not that we don't want all the advantages of progress, we just want a future that manages to be local and real too. Tracking the struggle for reality from Japanese theme parks to mock-Tudor villas and from Byron to Big Brother, 'Authenticity' explains where our reactions against spin and fakeness come from - and where they are going. The current revival of real food, real business, real culture flies in the face of expert opinion from politicians, economists, advertisers and big business - and they're having to run to keep up as our hype attention-span gets ever shorter. Optimistic, witty, highly thought-provoking and packed with fascinating stories, Boyle's search asks whether coolness is dead, how real reality is and whether realpolitik can ever change into real politics. He puts authenticity firmly on the map, lifting the lid on all the other symptoms of this powerful new phenomenon - revealing the unexpected force that looks set to change all our lives.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Edition: New e.
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Published: 01 Nov 2004

ISBN 10: 0007179642
ISBN 13: 9780007179640

Media Reviews

`A beguiling vision of hope for the future.' Time Out

`Authenticity has always been seeping out of our lives...and yet...[it] has a habit of fighting back. David Boyle walks the front lines of the way between real and fake.' Financial Times

`Boyle joins a long line, from Plato to Keynes, who argue that our view of reality, whether the figurative shadows on a cave wall, or the numbers called on a trading floor, is a speculative froth that distracts us from a superior reality.' Telegraph

`An insightful, ambitious argument.' Independent

`A book beginning here could easily be another polemic against consumer capitalism, superficial politics and the influence of a cynical media. Though Boyle criticises all three, his argument is subtler than bestselling broadsides like Naomi Klein's No Logo or Michael Moore's Stupid White Men ...The guts of the argument are that we need to find a new set of relationships between democracy, individualism and capitalism... its wide range, well-written examples and lively style offer something for us all.' Management Today

`A bold attempt to pull together a thousand strands of modern nostalgia and unease and present them as a unified whole.' Scotsman

Author Bio

David Boyle is the author of Funny Money and The Tyranny of Numbers. Editor of New Economics since 1988, he has also edited a range of other publications. David Boyle is a Fellow of the RSA and a well-known figure in organisations such as the New Economics Foundation. He has been a Winston Churchill Fellow and is a regular broadcaster on the future of money, cities, economics and now - reality.