Try GOLD - Free
Politics of Everyday Consumption
Millennium Post Kolkata
|Kolkata 14September2025
Not through protests or bans, but through small, everyday choices, consumers in India and China are rewriting the rules of globalization—and unsettling the West's cultural script
There was a time when queuing outside a fast-food outlet meant queuing up for a slice of modern life. Today, the same neon lights flicker over emptier counters, and the silence feels political. The world's most powerful brands are discovering that the most radical rebellions may begin not with riots, but with appetites that quietly turn away. A quiet rebellion is unfolding across the streets of Shanghai and New Delhi. The golden arches of McDonald's, once shorthand for aspiration and global belonging, are no longer as invincible as they seemed. Where queues once snaked outside for Big Macs and McFlurries, a new mood is emerging. It is not a fiery uprising or a state-sanctioned embargo, but something subtler and, in some ways, more powerful: consumers quietly choosing to turn away. The message is unmistakable: we no longer need your burgers to feel modern.
Echoes of Tagore and Swadeshi This moment carries a haunting literary resonance. In Ghare Baire (The Home and the World), Rabindranath Tagore wrestled with the emotional dilemmas of the Swadeshi movement, when rejecting foreign cloth was as much about identity as economics. Tagore's characters demonstrate that boycotts are never merely transactional; they permeate friendships, strain families, and blur the line between national pride and personal cost. Today's unease with McDonald's in India is not far removed from that century-old tension. Then it was Manchester cloth; now it is the burger. Both become symbols onto which more profound anxieties are projected: sovereignty, dignity, and the right to define one's modernity.
This story is from the Kolkata 14September2025 edition of Millennium Post Kolkata.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Millennium Post Kolkata
Millennium Post Kolkata
‘Zero FIR lodged in Birbhum over death of migrant worker in UP’
KOLKATA: The police have registered a zero FIR in Birbhum district over the death of a migrant worker in Kanpur in Uttar Pradesh, based on the complaint of his wife that he was murdered, a TMC MP said on Wednesday.
1 min
October 30, 2025
Millennium Post Kolkata
PM can do ‘anything for votes…
Accusing the BJP of \"misusing\" the JDU supremo's image to control the state.
3 mins
October 30, 2025
Millennium Post Kolkata
'CAUTION IS SAFETY': KMC on high alert to tackle Cyclone Montha impact
KOLKATA: Taking lessons from the city's waterlogging woes during the Durga Puja rains in late September, the Kolkata Municipal Corporation (KMC) has swung into action early this time to deal with impacts of Cyclone Montha.
1 min
October 30, 2025
Millennium Post Kolkata
Anxiety grips Panihati neighbourhood as SIR sparks fear after 57-yr-old’s suicide
ONCE A PLACE OF PEACE, NOW GRIPPED BY FEAR
2 mins
October 30, 2025
Millennium Post Kolkata
Posta Bazar: Mamata calls for unity, urges people to reject divisive forces
'GENUINE VOTERS SHOULD NOT BE HARASSED'
1 min
October 30, 2025
Millennium Post Kolkata
NAGALAND VARSITY SOUNDS ENVIRONMENTAL ALERT FOR LOKTAK LAKE IN MANIPUR
A Nagaland University study has sounded an environmental alert for Loktak Lake, one of India’s most iconic freshwater ecosystems and a designated “Ramsar Site’ in Manipur. The study was jointly supported by Nagaland University and IIT Delhi.
1 min
October 30, 2025
Millennium Post Kolkata
Farmers told to protect crops, avoid fertiliser use
Agri dept advisory amid Montha alert
1 min
October 30, 2025
Millennium Post Kolkata
One-day is all it takes
Women’s WC: Harmanpreet and Co face stern test against Australia in semi-final
1 min
October 30, 2025
Millennium Post Kolkata
'Govt may allow sugar exports'
The government is considering allowing sugar exports in the 2025-26 marketing year, as surplus stocks accumulate due to lower-than-expected diversion of the sweetener for ethanol production, a top government official said on Wednesday.
1 min
October 30, 2025
Millennium Post Kolkata
'Inferior quality coal' robs Darjeeling Himalayan Railway of steam
WORLD HERITAGE TAG QUESTIONED
2 mins
October 30, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
