Advertising and Popular Culture
Volume:
5
March 1996 | 296 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Advertising has permeated our popular culture as much as any other aspect of the media. This comprehensive text provides a balanced analysis of advertising - as a business practice and as a creator of symbolic environments. The critique reflects current theories on advertising by illustrating how it both draws from and contributes to popular culture, and uses specific excerpts from advertising campaigns to illustrate this point. The book traces the role of advertising in our culture from its evolution as part of the culture of mass consumption in the late 19th century, the development of advertising agencies and the creation of a consumer culture to an exploration of the major themes of American advertising. The author also provides a critical examination of the role of advertising in our culture today.
Energizers
Origins
Flagrant Criticisms
The Dynamics behind the Advertisement
The Dynamics of Popular Culture
Exchanges
The Surface of the Advertisement, Composed and Consumed
Deciphering Advertisements
Mixed Receptions
The Project of the Self
In Perspective