Transcript Slide 1
Advertising in American Culture
Alicia Barber, Ph.D.
Analyzing Advertisements as Cultural Sources
• Purpose: What is it trying to sell/promote?
• Audience: Who is the target customer?
• Strategies: Text, image, message
What can it tell us about American culture
at the time of its production?
Purpose
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Cultivating brand identity
Convincing consumer to switch brands
Introducing a new product
Lobbying for a political issue
Strategies
• Does the advertisement offer a “reason why” to buy the
product?
• Or is it oriented more to emotional appeals?
• Does the ad feature the product or does it focus on the
people using it?
• Does it address the reader directly with suggestions or
commands?
• Does the ad offer a reduced price or a premium?
• Does a celebrity provide an endorsement?
• Does it play on fear or anxiety or make positive appeals?
Nineteenth-century shop
19th Century Advertisements
Wanamaker’s 1902 Grand Depot
Wanamaker’s 1903 Philadelphia Store
Louis Sullivan: Carson, Pirie, Scott Building, Chicago, 1899.
R.H. Macy’s, 1908
Marshall Fields’ Tiffany dome
Marshall Field, pre-1900.
Women at Marshall Fields, Chicago, 1905
Christmas shoppers, a woman holding a parcel and walking
past a covered store window at Marshall Field's department
store on State Street, Dec. 1905
Looking into a Marshall Field & Co. department
store window in Chicago's Loop, 1910.
The Rise of Mass Culture
• Wave of new massmarketed consumer
goods: washing machines,
automobiles, furniture,
etc.
• Creation of community
through new shared
cultural experiences:
radio, movies, magazines,
tourism, advertising, etc.
• A new focus on the
consumer.
Harry Grant Dart, “Picturesque America,” 1909
Consumer Credit
“Buy now, pay later!”
1924 ad for Ford Runabout with
weekly purchase plan
• Before 1920, the average
consumer could not borrow
money.
• Allowed consumers to pay
smaller amounts over time.
• Began with large items like
cars, pianos, etc.
• Induced a “speculative
frenzy” as many bought
stocks with only 10% down
payment.
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1924 Advertisement
for Work Rite radios
July 6, 1922. J. Walter Thompson Advertising Agency Ad
The Modern Girl
“Youth demanded simple
clothes instead of those
fussy, elaborate styles of
the 1900’s. Clothes more
expressive of youth’s own
slim, natural grace—
clothes easier to wear in
the thousand-and-one
activities of modern
women!”
Ivory soap ad, 1929
“When girls started on their
headlong career of
swimming, golfing, riding
and motoring, they were
warned they would
eternally ruin their
complexions. But they just
did not. After several years
of sports and parties, their
skin remains soft and fine.
The modern girl still has the
kind of complexion men
bow to, fascinatingly fresh
and smooth.”
Pond’s ad from Ladies Home Journal, 1923.
Dr. West’s toothpaste,
1935
L’Aiglon, 1940s
Luis Sinco AP Photo/Los Angeles Times
Lego Ad, early 1960s
Volkswagen ad, 1963
Volkswagen ad, 1969
Sony Walkman ad, 1981
1969
1971
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1VM2eLhvsSM
1976
1980
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CD6j_7bgrtA