book data
2,218 ratings,
3.91
average rating, 216 reviews
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published
April 6th 2002
(first published 2000)
by Picador
binding
Paperback, 528 pages
isbn
0312421435
(isbn13: 9780312421434)
description
We live in an era where image is nearly everything, where the proliferation of brand-name culture has created, to take one hyperbolic example from Nao...more
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avg 3.91
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Read in April, 2009
recommended to Shelly by:
Laurel's commie fiancerecommends it for: Lloyd Doblers and Norma Raes
This book for me really brings the phrase "ignorance is bliss" to life. No, I do not want to support a mega, multi-billion dollar operation that ships its jobs over-seas so that it can pay pennies (if that) on the dollar for labor. And low wages aren't the worst of what's offered to the Vietnamese, Taiwanese, Chinese workers etc.(usually women) who wove together my Gap top and glued the sole onto my favorite old school Nikes. "Hey! Check out my new kicks! I'm keeping it real, yo!"...more
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Read in January, 2001
Ok ok ok, I know the hype surrounding this book. Your dreddy activist friend keeps recommending this to you. That dirty hippy that is a total vagabond is doing the same.
Well, what sold me on this book was an image taken from a busy street with all of the logo's removed using Photoshop. Striking.
And the book is long, interesting and at times redundant. Naomi Klein is hot, first of all, but mainly she's right. Advertising ruined the planet. Basically. We could ar...more
Well, what sold me on this book was an image taken from a busy street with all of the logo's removed using Photoshop. Striking.
And the book is long, interesting and at times redundant. Naomi Klein is hot, first of all, but mainly she's right. Advertising ruined the planet. Basically. We could ar...more
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Read in January, 2008
This book's divided into four sections—No Space, No Choice, No Jobs, and No Logo. The first three are cool, they talk about, respectively, how corporations in the 90s took over all our space with their logos, how we have no choice but to buy their products cause they buy all the other smaller companies and it's czecha hard to find indie stores anymore, and how there aren't any good jobs since corporations like Nike outsource everything to Burma. These first three sections are really good. Ever...more
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recommends it for:
coffee-shop hypocrites
Klein surely had good intentions when she wrote this book. Unfortunately it does not take long to realize that she has no idea about what she is actually talking about. Her understanding of economic processes can be labeled as highly flawed. The impressions she is giving about production facilities is dangerous. To think it is for the best interest for developing countries to close these factories is arrogant and plain wrong. Despite what Naomi Klein is trying to imply, the vast majority of the ...more
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6 comments
Naomi Klein is an incredibly sloppy scholar. As a writer she reminds me of Malcolm Gladwell. Both write books that seem as if their author has reflectively thrown everything they've found that seems vaguely interrelated and interesting.
In this book, Klein takes on marketing, branding, and sweatshops. Her main theme is the gradual corporatization of the world, but I find it hard to compare the absolute horrors of sweatshops (which her investigative journalism exposed beautifully) to ...more
In this book, Klein takes on marketing, branding, and sweatshops. Her main theme is the gradual corporatization of the world, but I find it hard to compare the absolute horrors of sweatshops (which her investigative journalism exposed beautifully) to ...more
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definitely some good information, but something about the books style turns me off. i feel a little preached to, or manipulated. I guess my recent-college-student self wants more of an attempt to appear objective. objectivity may be an illusion, but it is one of my personal favorites.
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Read in March, 2009
The cover page reads "No Space, No Choice, No Jobs, No Logo" and that's how the book is broken up, into those four sections. It starts off relatively strong, avoiding a number of pitfalls you expect her to get caught up in. Unfortunately, as it progresses it becomes rather uneven, mostly the last section, "No Logo." The section starts off with a ridiculous chapter about "culture jamming," which is essentially the use of graphic design skills to subvert advertising...more
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Read in January, 2001
No Logo is quite useful for fueling hatred for name brands and consumerism. Furthermore, it made me think differently about the advertisements which bombard so much of our public space. I read this book a very long time ago. I liked it a lot.
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Read in October, 2004
recommends it for:
coffee shop liberals
Yay for preaching to the converted. If you wanna do this glossy sort of thing at least be creative with it like Adbusters.
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Read in March, 2005
Сега повечето неща, които пише в книгата ми се струват очевидни и почти банални. През 2005-а, обаче много от информацията звучеше невероятно и ми отвори очите за проблеми, за които не се бях замислял.
Смятам обаче, че може да се направи много, ако искаме да се борим с корпор...more
Смятам обаче, че може да се направи много, ако искаме да се борим с корпор...more
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Read in March, 2002
Some good points are made although I found it somewhat tiresome, corporate evils and all that, without any productive or realistic alternatives. It lacked depth or an investigation into the more human components. It's reminiscent of "Fast Food Nation," although this book did come before. Sut Jhally is pretty interesting in his presentation of the same topic, "Advertising and the End of the World," although he's prone to histrionics and glosses over individual complicity in co...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in May, 2009
recommended to Jack by:
Sociology Lecturer
The folowing is shortened from a longer review I wrote for a sociology course:
In No Logo Naomi Klein exposes the practices of large multi-national companies and how they are infiltrating our lives, our space and how they infringe upon human rights and workers rights throughout the world.Klein in No Logo unravels the bright and optimistic ideology of neo-liberalism and argues that as a result people around the world are being exploited in a myriad of ways by large international corpor...more
In No Logo Naomi Klein exposes the practices of large multi-national companies and how they are infiltrating our lives, our space and how they infringe upon human rights and workers rights throughout the world.Klein in No Logo unravels the bright and optimistic ideology of neo-liberalism and argues that as a result people around the world are being exploited in a myriad of ways by large international corpor...more
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Read in February, 2009
Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek frequently uses as an explanatory topos the following reading of Einstein's theory of relativity: In the special theory of relativity (so the story goes) matter has the effect of curving the space around it, so the shortest distance between two points is not necessarily a straight line. However, with the shift to the general theory of relativity the story is reversed; the curvature of space is no longer the effect of matter's gravity, it is rather matter itself...more
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Read in March, 2009
Whew! I finally finished this dense and comprehensive look at how our lives have been reduced to corporate sponsorship (this message brought to you by Nike! Enhance your intellect, strive, go further, Nike.). Naomi Klein leaves no angle unexamined, no critique left unexplored. From the way that branding has affected our daily lives (utter ubiquity and overkill) to the way that it has effected our jobs, (loss of manufacturing jobs... jobs moving overseas to contract laborers) to the way those la...more
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Read in September, 2008
God, this was such a fantastic book. I'm sure you've heard of it - it's about sweatshop labour, globalisation, branding, the way in which companies produce and how that's changed over the years.
I picked this up because it was on the reading list in the back of Scarlett Thomas's PopCo, and I can see why - the sort of realisations that Alice in PopCo has about branding are all in here, as are the seeds of the movements against branding.
This is a depressing book, of cours...more
I picked this up because it was on the reading list in the back of Scarlett Thomas's PopCo, and I can see why - the sort of realisations that Alice in PopCo has about branding are all in here, as are the seeds of the movements against branding.
This is a depressing book, of cours...more
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Read in May, 2009
An excellent critique of multinational corporations and the broader impacts of their existence beyond their marketed brand identities. Naomi Klein first details how corporations gradually started making their way into all facets of our lives (No Space), how they homogenized landscapes and took over locally owned businesses (No Choice), how they laid off workers and moved to sweatshops to produce goods (No Jobs), and how people are fighting back (No Logo).
This is just another piece of...more
This is just another piece of...more
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Read in August, 2008
For an understanding of what's going on in the current social sphere, No Logo should be required reading. Not that the book is perfect, but it contains a wonderful analysis of how the corporate sphere has expanded to fill virtually all areas of public space and dialog.
One of the most surprising aspects in reading the book is the realization of how complicit we have all been in our own corporate takeover. In the early 90s, major companies (Nike being the paradigm, but for from the...more
One of the most surprising aspects in reading the book is the realization of how complicit we have all been in our own corporate takeover. In the early 90s, major companies (Nike being the paradigm, but for from the...more
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Read in October, 2008
No Space:
Public space is being branded at an ever increasing rate. From sports stadiums and athletes to concerts and educational institutions. These brands have an extraordinary influence over public policy and our lives.
No Choice:
As companies gain power they are taking over entire segments of the marketplace and ‘synergizing’ their brand. The classic example is the publishing company, which owns the distributing company that gets the product to the stores, the commu...more
Public space is being branded at an ever increasing rate. From sports stadiums and athletes to concerts and educational institutions. These brands have an extraordinary influence over public policy and our lives.
No Choice:
As companies gain power they are taking over entire segments of the marketplace and ‘synergizing’ their brand. The classic example is the publishing company, which owns the distributing company that gets the product to the stores, the commu...more
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Read in November, 2004
recommended to Brittany by:
My sisterrecommends it for: People in their 20s-30s
How I Came To Read This Book: My journalistic sister in her quest for knowledge (and hipster status in University?) read this book, and lent it to me.
The Plot: If you haven't already heard, advertising and corporations are EVIL. This book is a total culmination of 90s slow move away from and increasingly critical analysis of pop culture and marketing - and the corporations behind them. The book basically deconstructs (in very minute detail) the far-reaching spread of brands in today'...more
The Plot: If you haven't already heard, advertising and corporations are EVIL. This book is a total culmination of 90s slow move away from and increasingly critical analysis of pop culture and marketing - and the corporations behind them. The book basically deconstructs (in very minute detail) the far-reaching spread of brands in today'...more
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Read in June, 2008
Today, more and more campaigners are treating multinationals, and the policies that give them free rein, as the root cause of political injustices around the globe.
The impact this book had was slightly overshadowed by the events of September 11th 2001, when everyone's focus and concerns seemed to suddenly turn elsewhere. But that's not to say it has lost any of its power.
Reading it now, having read Klein's latest work (The Shock Doctrine: The Rise Of Disaster Capitalism),...more
The impact this book had was slightly overshadowed by the events of September 11th 2001, when everyone's focus and concerns seemed to suddenly turn elsewhere. But that's not to say it has lost any of its power.
Reading it now, having read Klein's latest work (The Shock Doctrine: The Rise Of Disaster Capitalism),...more
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