Can the Prosumer Economy be a Posthumanist Economy?

Authors

  • Eylül Tuana Çevirme Political Science and International Relations, Yeditepe University, Istanbul, Turkey
  • Elvan Ece Satıcı Good4Trust.org, Turkey
  • Uygar Özesmi The Center for Energy and Sustainable Development, Kadir Has University, Istanbul, Turkey.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33182/joph.v3i3.3005

Keywords:

Prosumer Economy, Posthumanism, Profit-Maximization, Anthropocentrism, Consumption

Abstract

Devastated by the ongoing climate and biodiversity crises, humanity is seeking a way out. For this, the current system where profit
maximization, consumption, and human dominance over nature needs to change. In the current anthropocentric economic system,
human beings are considered to be the most central and significant entities in the world. Both posthumanism and the prosumer
economy reject this idea. The prosumer economy postulates a way to transform the profit-maximizing consumer economy into one
that is based on ecological and social justice. This shared critique indicates a relationality between these two movements. We
propose an existence where the prosumer economy is the economic system of a posthumanist world. The combination of these two
ideas could provide the philosophical depth of the posthumanist perspective into the practice of the prosumer economy and provide
an option for posthumanism to be further actionable.

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Published

2023-10-31

How to Cite

Çevirme, E. T., Satıcı, E. E., & Özesmi, U. (2023). Can the Prosumer Economy be a Posthumanist Economy?. Journal of Posthumanism, 3(3), 287–294. https://doi.org/10.33182/joph.v3i3.3005

Issue

Section

Commentaries & Interviews

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