Adorno, Theodor - Culture Industry Reconsidered.txt

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Theodor W. Adorno

Culture Industry Reconsidered

The term culture industry was perhaps used for the first time in the book Dialectic of 
Enlightenment, which Horkheimer and I published in Amsterdam in 1947. In our drafts we 
spoke of 'mass culture'. We replaced that expression with 'culture industry' in order to exclude 
from the outset the interpretation agreeable to its advocates: that it is a matter of something 
like a culture that arises spontaneously from the masses themselves, the contemporary form of 
popular art. From the latter the culture industry must be distinguished in the extreme. The 
culture industry fuses the old and familiar into a new quality. In all its branches, products 
which are tailored for consumption by masses, and which to a great extent determine the 
nature of that consumption, are manufactured more or less according to plan. The individual 
branches are similar in structure or at least fit into each other, ordering themselves into a 
system almost without a gap. This is made possible by contemporary technical capabilities as 
well as by economic and administrative concentration. The culture industry intentionally 
integrates its consumers from above. To the detriment of both it forces together the spheres of 
high and low art, separated for thousands of years. The seriousness of high art is destroyed in 
speculation about its efficacy; the seriousness of the lower perishes with the civilizational 
constraints imposed on the rebellious resistance inherent within it as long as social control 
was not yet total. Thus, although the culture industry undeniably speculates on the conscious 
and unconscious state of the millions towards which it is directed, the masses are not primary, 
but secondary, they are an object of calculation; an appendage of the machinery. The 
customer is not king, as the culture industry would have us believe, not its subject but its 
object. The very word mass-media, specially honed for the culture industry, already shifts the 
accent onto harmless terrain. Neither is it a question of primary concern for the masses, nor of 
the techniques of communication as such, but of the spirit which sufllates them, their master's 
voice. The culture industry misuses its concern for the masses in order to duplicate, reinforce 
and strengthen their mentality, which it presumes is given and unchangeable. How this 
mentality might be changed is excluded throughout. The masses are not the measure but the 
ideology of the culture industry, even though the culture industry itself could scarcely exist 
without adapting to the masses. 
The cultural commodities of the industry are governed, as Brecht and Suhrkamp expressed it 
thirty years ago, by the principle of their realization as value, and not by their own specific 
content and harmonious formation. The entire practice of the culture industry transfers the 
profit motive naked onto cultural forms. Ever since these cultural forms first began to earn a 
living for their creators as commodities in the market-place they had already possessed 
something of this quality. But then they sought after profit only indirectly, over and above 
their autonomous essence. New on the part of the culture industry is the direct and 
undisguised primacy of a precisely and thoroughly calculated efficacy in its most typical 
products. The autonomy of works of art, which of course rarely ever predominated in an 
entirely pure form, and was always permeated by a constellation of effects, is tendentially 
eliminated by the culture industry, with or without the conscious will of those in control. The 
latter include both those who carry out directives as well as those who hold the power. In 
economic terms they are or were in search of new opportunities for the realization of capital 
in the most economically developed countries. The old opportunities became increasingly 
more precarious as a result of the same concentration process which alone makes the culture 
industry possible as an omnipresent phenomenon. Culture, in the true sense, did not simply 
accommodate itself to human beings; but it always simultaneously raised a protest against the 
petrified relations under which they lived, thereby honoring them. In so far as culture 
becomes wholly assimilated to and integrated in those petrified relations, human beings are 
once more debased. Cultural entities typical of the culture industry are no longer also 
commodities, they are commodities through and through. This quantitative shift is so great 
that it calls forth entirely new phenomena. Ultimately, the culture industry no longer even 
needs to directly pursue everywhere the profit interests from which it originated. These 
interests have become objectified in its ideology and have even made themselves independent 
of the compulsion to sell the cultural commodities which must be swallowed anyway. The 
culture industry turns into public relations, the manufacturing of 'goodwill' per se, without 
regard for particular firms or saleable objects. Brought to bear is a general uncritical 
consensus, advertisements produced for the world, so that each product of the culture industry 
becomes its own advertisement. 
Nevertheless, those characteristics which originally stamped the transformation of literature 
into a commodity are maintained in this process. More than anything in the world, the culture 
industry has its ontology, a scaffolding of rigidly conservative basic categories which can be 
gleaned, for example, from the commercial English novels of the late seventeenth and early 
eighteenth centuries. What parades as progress in the culture industry, as the incessantly new 
which it offers up, remains the disguise for an eternal sameness; everywhere the changes 
mask a skeleton which has changed just as little as the profit motive itself since the time it 
first gained its predominance over culture. 
Thus, the expression 'industry' is not to be taken too literally. It refers to the standardization of 
the thing itself - such as that of the Western, familiar to every movie-goer - and to the 
rationalization of distribution techniques, but not strictly to the production process. Although 
in film, the central sector of the culture industry, the production process resembles technical 
modes of operation in the extensive division of labor, the employment of machines and the 
separation of the laborers from the means of production - expressed in the perennial conflict 
between artists active in the culture industry and those who control it - individual forms of 
production are nevertheless maintained. Each product affects an individual air; individuality 
itself serves to reinforce ideology, in so far as the illusion is conjured up that the completely 
reified and mediated is a sanctuary from immediacy and life. Now, as ever, the culture 
industry exists in the 'service' of third persons, maintaining its affinity to the declining 
circulation process of capital, to the commerce from which it came into being. Its ideology 
above all makes use of the star system, borrowed from individualistic art and its commercial 
exploitation. The more dehumanized its methods of operation and content, the more diligently 
and successfully the culture industry propagates supposedly great personalities and operates 
with heart-throbs. It is industrial more in a sociological sense, in the incorporation of 
industrial forms of organization even when nothing is manufactured - as in the rationalization 
of office work - rather than in the sense of anything really and actually produced by 
technological rationality. Accordingly, the misinvestments of the culture industry are 
considerable, throwing those branches rendered obsolete by new techniques into crises, which 
seldom lead to changes for the better. 
The concept of technique in the culture industry is only in name identical with technique in 
works of art. In the latter, technique is concerned with the internal organization of the object 
itself, with its inner logic. In contrast, the technique of the culture industry is, from the 
beginning, one of distribution and mechanical reproduction, and therefore always remains 
external to its object. The culture industry finds ideological support precisely in so far as it 
carefully shields itself from the full potential of the techniques contained in its products. It 
lives parasitically from the extra-artistic technique of the material production of goods, 
without regard for the obligation to the internal artistic whole implied by its functionality 
(Sachlichkeit), but also without concern for the laws of form demanded by aesthetic 
autonomy. The result for the physiognomy of the culture industry is essentially a mixture of 
streamlining, photographic hardness and precision on the one hand, and individualistic 
residues, sentimentality and an already rationally disposed and adapted romanticism on the 
other. Adopting Benjamin's designation of the traditional work of art by the concept of aura, 
the presence of that which is not present, the culture industry is defined by the fact that it does 
not strictly counterpose another principle to that of aura, but rather by the fact that it 
conserves the decaying aura as a foggy mist. By this means the culture industry betrays its 
own ideological abuses. 
It has recently become customary among cultural officials as well as sociologists to warn 
against underestimating the culture industry while pointing to its great importance for the 
development of the consciousness of its consumers. It is to be taken seriously, without 
cultured snobbism. In actuality the culture industry is important as a moment of the spirit 
which dominates today. Whoever ignores its influence out of skepticism for what it stuffs into 
people would be naive. Yet there is a...
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