
New Books in Critical Theory Todd Mcgowan, "Pure Excess: Capitalism and the Commodity" (Columbia UP, 2024)
Aug 18, 2025
In this conversation, Todd McGowan, a theory and film instructor at the University of Vermont, presents his groundbreaking ideas on capitalism's obsession with pure excess. He examines how this economic system veers away from social good, offering endless desires yet deepening emptiness. McGowan links capitalism to art, suggesting that creative expression can challenge its limitations. He also critiques the superficiality of corporate progressivism and discusses the paradox of wealth, questioning its capacity for true fulfillment. A thought-provoking take on desire and systemic issues!
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Value From Inutility
- Commodities gain value through inutility rather than usefulness.
- Capitalism sustains itself by producing and selling things beyond actual need.
Inutility Generates Desire
- Inutility is the source of capitalist value and enables promises of excess.
- The more a product is merely useful, the less enjoyment attaches to it.
Systemic Production Of Excess
- Excess is produced objectively by the system, not just by bad actors.
- If one firm stops maximizing excess, competitors will, so exploitation is structural.









