Tag Archives: conspicuous consumption

Waste, Luxury, and the Human Condition: A Reflection on Peacocks, Ferraris, and the Nature of Excess

This article explores the parallels between the extravagant plumage of peacocks and the luxury of Ferraris, questioning the purpose and value of waste and excess. While a peacock’s feathers serve a biological function by signaling genetic fitness, a Ferrari in central London is a symbol of conspicuous consumption, displaying wealth rather than evolutionary advantage. The article delves into the complexities of waste in human society, examining how luxury can signal success but also reflect social inequality and environmental degradation. Ultimately, it argues that waste must be balanced with meaningful values to avoid becoming destructive.

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Waste, Luxury, and the Human Condition: Intersectionality of Violet Paget’s Satan the Waster, Siegfried Sassoon’s At the Cenotaph, and Rory Sutherland’s views on Ferraris in London

While browsing YouTube Shorts, mainly for Tacticus Tips and Warhammer 40K fan fiction, I stumbled upon a video featuring Rory Sutherland discussing the absurdity of Ferraris in central London. His thoughts on waste reminded me of a book I encountered in the school library at KEGS Aston around 1983: Vernon Lee’s Satan the Waster. This article discusses the nature of waste, drawing a comparison with Siegfried Sassoon’s At the Cenotaph. Through this lens, it explores how both Sassoon and Violet Paget (writing as Vernon Lee) critique the senselessness of war, using waste as a symbol for the destruction of human life, resources, and potential, much like how ridiculous luxury goods are symbols of impractical extravagance.

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