Throughout the
immediate postwar years ‘self-sufficiency’ meant ‘doing-it-yourself’ and
‘making do’ with limited resources not as a result of choice but necessity
brought about by housing, material, product and labour shortages. From this
earlier type of self-sufficiency two distinct lifestyles emerged. Marketers
began to recognise the potential of ‘do-it-yourselfers’ as consumers and began
to cash in with campaigns directed at young home-makers to entice them to buy a
range of products from Laminex to paint. By contrast, the 1970s ‘back to the
earth’ movement with its focus on self-sufficiency, organic gardening and
sustainable living emerged as a response to dissatisfaction with mass
consumption.
These two
lifestyles continue to be promoted and adopted. There is a sharp contrast
between the desires of aspirational ‘home-makers’ on the one hand and
alternative life-stylers on the other. Alternative sustainable lifestyles –
that reject the ideology of mass consumption – are in sharp contrast to the
consumerist aspirations as presented in TV DIY shows such as ‘Better Homes and
Gardens’, numerous glossy magazines and even more numerous retail outlets. This
type of packaged DIY is not about self-sufficiency and sustainable living at
all. What is evident is that there are philosophical differences between those
who ‘do’ it themselves and those who ‘watch’ DIY being performed by
professional TV personalities; between those who consciously reject
over-consumption and those who remodel perfectly functional kitchens in order
to maximise auction results by the superficial enhancements of their homes.
Self-sufficiency
and sustainable living is about making a conscious choice to really
‘do-it-yourself’, about setting and meeting challenges. But it is also about a
wider concern with lessening the impact on the environment by conserving
resources, not just for one’s own family but for the benefit of the whole
community for now and the future.
Marketers and
advertisers are certainly adopting buzzwords like ‘green’,
‘environmentally-friendly’ and ‘organic’. But self-sufficiency as adopted by
alternative lifestylers remains outside marketing hype. Most significant
however, is that the self-provider lifestyle ethic is has not been easily
co-opted.
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