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Saturday, January 27, 2007

You can't buy happines. Can you?

From The Age

Sydney's culture of the relentless pursuit of property, perfect bodies and status has British psychologist and author Oliver James worried. As part of research for his recently released book, Affluenza, he travelled to seven countries to research the effect of consumerism on happiness.

He found the obsessive pursuit of money and possessions was not buying happiness. The affluenza virus was worst in Sydney, where he found interviewing locals a depressing experience. It was, he said, "the most vacuous of cities. The Dolly Parton of cities in Australia."

Adelaide and Melbourne had a "different vibe" and did not strike James as being as materialistic as Sydney. He had not been to Sydney before and expected a "philistine nation" of "jolly, uncomplicated fun-seekers". Instead, he found a city in thrall to American values and a puritan work ethic that robbed life of joy and meaning. Middle-class Sydney, he writes, is "packed with career-obsessed workaholics". When they are not working the longest hours in the developed world, they pursue perfect bodies through joyless fitness regimes, or obsess about property prices. Always, they are looking around anxiously, in the hope that others aren't doing better than them.

7 comments:

flametree said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
flametree said...

Having moved from Adelaide to Sydney around a year ago, I can vouch for the different vibes of the 2 cities. Unfortunately, it is very easy to become caught up in the materialistic, workaholic mentality that exudes from Sydney society. Here, the persuit of happiness is a never-ending persuit that drains the humanity from people, leaving nothing but empty shells surrounded in the latest fashion and gadgets.

SBS screened a brilliant documentary series late last this / early this year called Decadence: The Meaningless of Modern Life which investigated this issue from an Australian perspective. One of the images from it summed it up nicely - a simple piece of street art simply saying:

Work
Consume
Be Silent
Die!

Chris said...

Oh, no......sorry......Dolly Parton vacuous?......never

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