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Advertising

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Advertising. When I'm watchin' my TV. and that man comes on to tell me. how white my shirts can be. Well he can't be a man 'cause he ... Rolling Stones ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Advertising


1
Advertising
  • When I'm watchin' my TVand that man comes on to
    tell mehow white my shirts can be.Well he can't
    be a man 'cause he doesn't smokethe same
    cigarrettes as me.I can't get no, oh no no
    no.Hey hey hey, that's what I say.I can't get
    no satisfaction .
  • Rolling Stones

2
  • It could be argued that advertising is the most
    influential institution of socialization in
    modern society it structures mass media
    content it seems to play a key role in the
    construction of gender identity it impacts upon
    the relation of children and parents in terms of
    the mediation of and creation of needs it
    dominates strategy in political campaigns
    recently it has emerged as a powerful voice in
    the arena of public policy issues concerning
    energy and regulation it controls some of our
    most important cultural institutions such as
    sports and popular music and it has itself in
    recent years become a favorite topic of everyday
    conversation. Sut Jhally, 1990

3
Do you think a multibillion dollar industry could
possibly have no effect?
4
  • Advertising is the main weapon that
    manufacturers use in their attempt to produce
    an adequate consuming market for the products.
    To this end advertising works to create false
    needs in people (false because the are the needs
    of the manufacturers rather than the consumers).
    Sut Jhally

5
  • Advertising is a discourse between people and
    objects.
  • Advertising is the way that markets are produced
    for consumption.
  • Advertising creates false needs in consumers
    (Recall the Galbraith reading)

6
The Symbolic Meaning of Goods
  • Objects have long had both use and symbolic
    meanings.
  • Goods are a means of social communication.
  • Relations of power and privilege are embedded.

7
The History of Symbolic Goods
  • Rituals were a means to fix the symbolic meaning
    of goods.
  • Historically, many societies had only those with
    prestige and those who simply subsisted.
  • How does the Consumer society alter these
    tendencies?

8
Meaning is No Longer Fixed
  • The object has been functionally
    decontextualized.
  • The definition of an object of consumption is
    entirely independent of objects themselves and
    exclusively a function of the logic of
    signification.
  • Consumption occurs within the context of brand
    names.

9
The Floating Signifier Effect
  • The appropriation of meanings for advertising
    promotes what is termed the floating signifier
    effect (Baudrillard, 1975) or the shift in the
    use value attached to objects such that any
    meaning or quality can be associated with any
    object.

10
Advertising
  • Objects lose any connection to their practical
    utility.
  • The control over symbolism rather than production
    becomes paramount.
  • Consumption is relative, rather than absolute
    activity. Satisfaction, therefore, is also
    relative.

11
The Experience of Consumption
  • Pleasure
  • Comfort
  • Disappointment

12
Consumption Takes Place in a Social Context
  • Advertising shows us the mediating role that
    commodities could play in relations to
    individuals and expectations.

13
What is Freedom?
  • Free Market becomes the only type of freedom.
  • Free choice in the market becomes an experiment
    in arbitrariness

14
Communication and Satisfaction
  • Goods act as both communicators of social
    ideas/power and satisfiers of needs.
  • The act of consumption itself has come to
    represent what goods once did.
  • Hence, the act of consumption as a means of
    communication leads to a certain amount of
    satisfaction.

15
Susan Bordo
  • Advertisements work as gender ideology.
  • Exploitation of womens insecurity
  • But the act of consuming also relieves the
    anxiety it creates.

16
Empirical Example- The Adman in the Parlor
  • Magazines used fiction, advice, letters etc. to
    instruct consumers in the right and necessary
    forms of production.
  • Creates a moral base to consumption.
  • How does this happen today?

17
Selling Rebellion
  • Rebellion As a marketing gimmick is not real
    rebellion.
  • A commercial notes the exploitation of the common
    worker with impressive statistics.
  • Are they even real?
  • The Commercial is for Universal Studios Orlando
  • Kilbourne- alcohol and cigarrettes

18
Coding
  • Goods as a means to let others know who we are.
    Goods are sold to us as a means of social
    differentiation.
  • Baudrillard argues that individual desires are
    disguised expressions of social differences in a
    system of cultural meanings that is produced
    through commodities. Fashion is a code, a set of
    infinitely variable sets of social differences.

19
Implication
  • If consumer culture is premised upon the
    production of difference through commodities,
    then the system is extremely resilient.

20
The Move to Specification Market Segmentation
  • Viewing a heterogeneous market as a number of
    smaller homogenous markets in response to
    differing product preferences.
  • Key marketing development.
  • Required ability to sample population.
  • Some demographics count more than others.

21
Lifestyle Advertising
  • Marketing a lifestyle that is associated with
    specific products.
  • Communicates with market segments
  • Gets the right message to the right people at the
    right time

22
Three Trends
  • Market Segmentation has led to three interrelated
    trends
  • 1) Shift from product focused to user centered
    marketing (since the products are often
    indistinguishable)
  • 2) Increase in narrative and dramatic forms that
    stress benefits to the consumer rather than
    product characteristics
  • 3) Decline in amount of hard or explicit
    information presented about a product.

23
Its Not a Direct Message
  • Meaning is created through the audience. Its an
    active association you make.
  • We constantly recreate the meanings of
    advertisements

24
Gender and Advertising
  • Gender Wars (Men are from Mars, women are from
    Venus)
  • Women are treated as objects/children
  • Desire- men want women, women want chocolate

25
The Codes of the Marketplace
  • We depend upon the meaning that they provide for
    the definition of our own social lives.
  • They depend upon our knowledge of referent
    systems for the operation of meaning.

26
Marketing Ideologies- Propaganda
  • Hermann and Chomsky- Manufacturing Consent.
  • Propaganda Model- workings of the media serve to
    mobilize public support for the special interests
    that dominate the state and private activity, and
    that their choices, emphases, and omissions can
    often be understood best by analyzing them in
    such terms.
  • -focus on inequality in wealth and power, and its
    multi-level effects on mass media interests and
    choices.

27
Ingredients of the Propaganda Model
  • 1) The size, concentrated ownership, owner
    wealth, and profit orientation of the dominant
    mass media firms
  • 2) Advertising as the primary income source of
    the mass media
  • 3) The reliance of the media on information
    provided by government, business, and experts
    funded and approved by these primary sources and
    agents of power
  • 4) Flak- as a means of disciplining the media
  • 5) Anticommunism as a national religion and
    control mechanism
  • Being replaced by Anti-terrorism today.

28
  • Walter Lippman- refers to the special importance
    of propaganda as the manufacture of consent.
  • Regular organ of popular government.
  • What is unreported?

29
The Homogenization Hypothesis
  • Bagdikian (1997)- combination of ownership
    concentration and growing horizontal integration
    that the absence of competition in the media
    industry leads to homogeneous media products.
  • By 1998, only 22 American Cities had two or more
    competitive daily newspapers.

30
Advertising and the News
  • Advertising continues to exert a powerful
    influence on the news media.
  • -Does it dictate the content of our news?
    Certainly to some degree, but not unilaterally.
  • News usually depicts advertisers products and
    their broad interests in a favorable light.
  • Reporters and editors may not see themselves as
    defending their advertisers interest, but they
    are fully aware of the economic role of their
    major advertisers.
  • Stories are repeated.

31
Terrorism in Televised Fiction
  • Terrorism is placed firmly within a criminal
    rather than a political or economic framework,
    and it is exclusively defined as violent.
  • Legitimates the states use of violent
    countermeasures by arguing that exceptional
    threats to the social order require exceptional
    responses in which consideration of civil
    liberties, democratic accountability, and due
    process, are held in abeyance in the interests of
    efficiency.
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