What do decaffeinated coffee, nicotine-free cigarettes, sugar-free jams, non-alcoholic beer, and non-dairy milk have in common?
They all participate in an open deception otherwise known as the “lite” world.
“Lite” is a label for a product that retains its name while shedding some of its core components. Colour or taste, effect or benefit, “lite” reinvents itself to cater to the masses.
To ensure no customer is left behind, the product exposes its “deception” in broad daylight. It doesn’t hide behind marketing tactics.
In a way, it dispenses with “commodity fetishism”, the Marxist concept that refers to how economic relationships in a capitalist society are seen as relationships between things (like money and products) rather than between people, ignoring the labour and human relationships behind their existence.
But “lite” products don’t try to masquerade the lie as truth, or at the very least, they consider their deception to be an innocent and well-intentioned one.
A perceived innocence
But why do these goods exist at all?
The “lite” world is born out of evolving human demands. Under the bright lights of supermarket aisles, we stroll between rows of “lite” products on one side, and “full” products on the other. This juxtaposition represents the sheer adaptability of these goods.
As soon as a product encounters an obstacle on its way to a buyer’s shopping basket, be it health-related, religious or social, it transforms itself into a new form, seeking the right mask that will sweeten its nature, alter its appearance and demonstrate its innocence.