The rise of corporate capitalism was a cultural revolution as well
as an economic event, according to James Livingston. That
revolution resides, he argues, in the fundamental reconstruction of
selfhood, or subjectivity, that attends the advent of an 'age of
surplus' under corporate auspices. From this standpoint, consumer
culture represents a transition to a society in which identities as
well as incomes are not necessarily derived from the possession of
productive labor or property. From the same standpoint, pragmatism
and literary naturalism become ways of accommodating the new forms
of solidarity and subjectivity enabled by the emergence of
corporate capitalism. So conceived, they become ways of
articulating alternatives to modern, possessive individualism.
Livingston argues accordingly that the flight from pragmatism led
by Lewis Mumford was an attempt to refurbish a romantic version of
modern, possessive individualism. This attempt still shapes our
reading of pragmatism, Livingston claims, and will continue to do
so until we understand that William James was not merely a
well-meaning middleman between Charles Peirce and John Dewey and
that James's pragmatism was both a working model of postmodern
subjectivity and a novel critique of capitalism.