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Consumer Cultures

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Title: Consumer Cultures


1
Consumer Cultures
  • Chapter 2
  • Text Ads, Fads, Consumer Culture
  • Course Critical Perspectives in Advertising

2
Scholarly Studies of Advertising
  • Advertising has been of interest to scholars in
    many disciplines because these scholars see
    advertising as one of the central institutions in
    America
  • Keep in mind that Americans are exposed to more
    advertising than people in any other society
  • This is because of the amount of time we spend
    watching TV and listening to the radio
  • And because our media institutions are mostly
    private, for-profit ones public TV and radio
    attract relatively small (though generally highly
    influential) audiences in America

3
Shaping Our Values
  • In his 1954 book People of Plenty David Potter
    observed that advertising not only has economic
    consequences, but it also shapes our values
  • Potter wrote If the economic effect is to make
    the purchaser like what he buys, the social
    effect is, in a parallel but broader sense, to
    make the individual like what he gets- to enforce
    already existing attitudes, to diminish the range
    and variety of choices, and in terms of
    abundance, to exalt the materialistic virtues of
    consumption.

4
Defining a Consumer Culture
  • As defined by our texts author, consumer
    cultures are those in which there has been a
    great expansion (even an explosion) of commodity
    production
  • This leads to societies full of consumer goods
    and services and places where these consumer
    goods can be purchased
  • In consumer cultures, the game people play is
    get as much as you can
  • Success is defined as being the person who has
    the most toys
  • This leads to a lust for consuming products
    and conspicuously displaying them- as a means of
    demonstrating that one is a success and,
    ultimately, that one is worthy

5
Consumption Lifestyle
  • Mike Featherstone wrote in 2007s Consumer
    Culture and Postmodernism that the new heroes
    of consumer culture make lifestyle a life project
    and display their individuality and sense of
    style inthe assemblage of goods, clothes,
    practices, experiences, appearances and bodily
    dispositions they design together into a
    lifestyle
  • Featherstone says the consumer culturalist
    speaks not only with his clothes, but also with
    his home, furnishings, decoration, car and other
    activities which are to be read and classified in
    terms of the presence and absence of taste.
  • And, of course, it is advertising that teaches
    us about the world of consumer goods- what is
    fashionable, hot, cool, in andout
  • See movie trailer The Joneses

6
Taste Cultures in America
  • Sociologist Herbert Gans suggested that in the
    U.S. we have five taste cultures high culture,
    upper-middle culture, lower-middle culture, low
    culture, and quasi-folk culture
  • Each taste culture has its own art, literature,
    music, etc which differ mainly in that they
    express different aesthetic standards
  • Advertising agencies have to figure out how to
    direct messages that will resonate with the
    various taste cultures
  • One way is to determine who will most likely be
    watching a certain television program

7
The Neiman Marcus Example
  • People may feel a great deal of pressure to show
    taste and discrimination, suitable to their
    socioeconomic status, in the products and
    services they consume
  • In the U.S. Southwest, especially Texas, the
    Neiman Marcus stores played to this by appealing
    to oil millionaires who had plenty of money but
    no sense of style adequate to their financial
    resources.
  • NMs catalogs with their absurdly expensive
    his and her gifts generated lots of publicity
    for the store and also generated a halo effect
    for items purchased there
  • Anything purchased at NM became by definition
    stylish and in good taste
  • Our books author describes what Neiman Marcus
    did as couthification (couth defined good
    manners, refinement, cultured)

8
Consumer Culture Negatives
  • People become too caught up in consuming things
    as a means of validating themselves and proving
    their worth
  • In consumer cultures, people all too often dont
    think about what they have but only concern
    themselves with what they dont have
  • Needs are finite but desires are infinite
  • As soon as our needs have been taken care of, we
    become obsessed with what we dont have but want
  • Or what advertising tells us we should want!

9
Manufacturing Desire
  • What advertising does, among other things, is
    manufacture desire and shape it, and thus create
    people who are insatiable and who have been
    conditioned to continually lust for more things
  • Retail anthropologist Paco Underhill who
    studies shoppers, describes shopping as a
    transforming experience, a method of becoming a
    newer, perhaps even slightly improved person.
  • He says the products you buy turn you into that
    other, idealized version of yourself. That dress
    makes you beautiful, this lipstick makes you
    kissable, that lamp turns your house into an
    elegant showplace.

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