

Todd Mcgowan, "Pure Excess: Capitalism and the Commodity" (Columbia UP, 2024)
Aug 18, 2025
Todd McGowan is a theory and film professor at the University of Vermont and author of several influential books, including his latest, which challenges traditional views of capitalism. He discusses 'pure excess', arguing that capitalism thrives on fueling endless desires without fulfillment. McGowan critiques the simplification of economic issues and explores the allure of consumerism as a modern religion. He also highlights youth activism's paradoxes and emphasizes art’s potential to expose and resist capitalism's contradictions.
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Capitalism As Production Of Pure Excess
- Capitalism centers on production of excess rather than mere reproduction of necessities.
- Its lure is a fantasy of pure plenitude without the lack that structures desire.
Buying Objects For Their Excess
- Morteza bought a Bergman Criterion box set despite not owning a Blu-ray player and already owning the films digitally.
- Todd relates and calls such purchases ideal examples of commodities as pure excess rather than utility.
Inutility Fuels Commodity Value
- Commodities gain value from inutility: items meant to be more than simply useful.
- Capitalism sustains itself by producing goods we don't need so consumers keep buying more than necessary.