Title: The American Dream for Sale:
1The American Dream for Sale
- Ethnic Images in Magazines
2(No Transcript)
3Pre-reading
- What is American Dream? What are the
connotations of for sale? As a society, the
Americans love sales and have made salesmanship
and business competition international ideals. So
shouldnt the American Dream naturally be
associated with the idea of selling and buying? - What are your attitudes towards advertising? Is
it fun? A seductive way to get you to part with
your money? Cynical? Necessary? Does advertising
inform people about what they desire? Or does
advertising create desires? Or both?
4In-reading
- Hanging participle encyclopedia article about
Hanging participle. - Ranging in price from 10 to 15 c, easily within,
they were an. (par. 2) - Great Depression (par. 5) article about the
Great Depression - The Noble Savage encyclopedia article about The
Noble Savage.
5Building vocabulary
- A. Used in the sense of social mobility, the idea
that each person should have an equal chance to
rise or gain a place in society through his or
her talents - B. the activities of the skilled and devoted
housewife who manages the home as her husband
manages a business the cheery outlook of the
homemaker, ostensible happy with sharp gender
distinctions, has given this task and word a
negative connotation
6Building Vocabulary
- C. a sterotypical or characteristic image, using
the work stock as in stock in trade, meaning
the defining practices or standard equipment of a
person or group
7Building Vocabulary
- D. The five and dime was a general store where
you could buy more or less anything at a modest
price, and a wooden statue of an Indian in full
headress, sometimes holding something for sale in
his hand, would frequently be found outside the
front door once one might have said that these
were five and dime Indians and not the real
thing, but today these statues recognized as
demeaning
8Building Vocabulary
- E. like apple pie, meaning composed of qualities
essentially American but maybe too much so,
including an implication of race or ethnic
exclussiveness.
9Understanding the writers ideas
- 1. How to live perfect American life (par. 1).
- 2. Commonly held stereotypes (ar. 4)e.g. the
courteous but subservient black railroad porter
(par. 5). - 3. the production of a plethora of ready-made
goods, all seeking mass markets, and the
availability of low postal rates, improved
type-setting, etc. which prompted the growth of
popular magazines as ideal vehicles for sales
messages (par. 2)
10Understanding the writers ideas
- 4. The mass audience required creation of an
average person (par. 3). Ethnic groups were
often depicted through commonly held stereotypes
(par. 4). - 5. Those from ethnic groups are depicted as
subservient (par. 5), in a service role (par.6),
or by the broad-brush stroke of simple external
attributes (Chiquita banana, the Scotsman in
kilt) (par. 7-9).
11Understanding the writers ideas
- 6. Magazines.
- 7. In addition to whites, other American groups
were targeted in advertising. - 8. Advertising is now directed at specific
minority groups these ads reflect the
difficulties of attempting to reconcile being
accepted into the mainstream and yet sustaining
ethnic identity.
12Understanding the writers techniques
- 1. In the opening paragraph, the writer lays out
a many-faceted thesis, the gist of which is that
images of ethnic groups in magazines reflect the
economic and social changes of the last century,
changes characterized by conflicting attitudes
about ethnicity and the relation between
ethnicity and the American mainstream.
13Understanding the writers techniques
- 2. To place the depiction of ethnic groups within
the broad story of the rise of advertising and
its causes. - 3. The subservient Negro the Noble Savage the
colorful foreigner.
14Understanding the writers techniques
- 4. It may not have relied as much on the
pictorial evidence it may have used less
accessible (more professionally-directed)
diction, and more scholarly references. An op-ed
piece implies a more popular audience than an
exhibition, and might be written in simpler
English.
15Understanding the writers techniques
- 5. She offers examples organized by chronology
and type. Her transitions underscore the
chronological development, while also using
helpful linking words An advertisementreveals
another way (par. 6)
16advertisement
- 7. Literary images are not often as succinct, or
as graphic as visual images, especially those
in advertising. Advertising, as the writer says,
necessitates simplification. Literature aims at
the greater complexity and ambiguity of life. The
image of Jim in Mark Twains Huckleberry Finn,
for example, is made up of a complex actions and
events, not just one snap-shop. And to this day
opinions vary as to how Jim should be viewas a
portrait in depth, or as a stereotype.
17advertisement
- 8. In three ways first, the conclusion brings us
to the present, ending the chronological
sequence second, it brings the story full
circle, from the targeting of whites only to the
targeting of ethnic groups as well and finally,
it notes the complex implications and conflicts
of the present state of affairs, as compared with
the past.