Consume, be silent, die

The phrase "Consume, be silent, die'" embodies a critique of consumer culture, capturing what Raoul Vaneigem called "the poverty of abundance". Variants include "work, consume, be silent, die" and "work, buy, consume, die". The phrase can be traced back to 1970s environmental protests but regained prominence during the Occupy Wall Street protests of 2011.[1]

Work Buy Consume Die

Origins and popular culture edit

Some claim the phrase's origin is in 1970s graffiti. One of Benny Zable's GreeDozer costumes includes the phrase. Early photos of this costume are undated, but Hutton and Connors (1999, p. 153) report sightings in 1979.[2] It was also familiar to train passengers in Sydney as graffiti on the wall of a tunnel approaching Central Station as early as 1972.

  • The Belgian philosopher Raoul Vaneigem expressed a closely related sentiment in his 1967 book The Revolution of Everyday Life: "Work to survive, survive by consuming, survive to consume; the hellish cycle is complete."[3]
  • The poetry journal Moria published a photograph by the photographer Ana Viviane Minorelli of the phrase as graffiti.[4]
  • The punk band CCCP sang in their 1986 song Morire the words Produci, consuma, crepa (Italian for "Produce, Consume, Die").[5]
  • The punk band "Man Will Destroy Himself" have an album entitled Consume...Be Silent...Die....
  • The Summer Camp Riot album Mole Patrol includes the song "Work Buy Consume Die (Ring The Frickin Bell Already)".

References edit

  1. ^ Lacey, Marc (18 October 2011). "Countless Grievances, One Thread: We're Angry". The New York Times.
  2. ^ Hutton, Drew and Libby Connors, A history of the Australian environment movement, Cambridge University Press (April 13, 1999),ISBN 978-0-521-45686-9
  3. ^ Vaneigen, Raoul. "The Revolution of Everyday Life." PM Press, 2012. pg. 53.
  4. ^ "Minorelli".
  5. ^ "CCCP Fedeli alla linea Morire - Google Search". www.google.com. Retrieved 2020-10-29.

External links edit