Title: The Rise of Advertising-Driven Consumerism
1The Rise of Advertising-Driven Consumerism
- Primary source is Stuart Ewens Captains of
Consciousness, 1976. - Social Roots of Consumer Culture
- Mass reproduction is aided especially by the
reproduction of the masses Walter Benjamin - The rise of industrial capitalism is the primary
historical backdrop for the study of popular
culture.
2 Pre-industrial Industrial
- Small town
- Small scale production
- Local control over our lives
- Urban, mass society
- Mass production/consump.
- Big Business, Big Govt
3Progress, as promoted by industrial capitalists
- Faith in technology/machines to improve the
quality of life life gets better and better with
the application of technology. - Faith that consuming the products that machines
produce is a means to happiness or fulfillment. - Advertisements inundate the masses with the idea
that consumption is the means to salvation. - Less technological societies are portrayed as
culturally backward or deficient.
4The downside of modernity was largely ignored by
industrial capitalists
- Harsh conditions on the job
- Over-rationalization and dehumanization
- Pollution and environmental degradation
- Stress and alienation
- the rat race
- Concentration of power
5Theoretical criticisms
- Karl Marx industrial capitalism produces
oppression of the have-nots (the proletariat) by
the haves (the bourgeoisie). - Max Weber industrial capitalism may contribute
to over-rationalization, with its heavy emphasis
on bureaucracy, formality, efficiency,
conformity, and predictability. - Both criticisms see alienation and loss of
humanity as modern problems linked somewhat to
progress (not that they would go back to some
good ole days)
6Early 20th Century Industrialists
- Sought new ways to maintain control over workers
in the factory - Workers needed discipline.
- Frederick Taylor scientific human engineer who
rationalized factory workers to maximize profits. - Workers were treated as machines to be made more
efficient very dehumanizing. - Industrys time is money approach reflected a
self-interested private-profit focus but it
came at workers expense.
7Shift in Management Attitudes
- Workers were potential citizens, providing they
learned how to be disciplined and obedient. - A new interest in workers leisure time are they
spending it properly? - An interest in the wider society perhaps the
industrialist could help bring about a new world
order. - To them, capitalism was seen as more than an
economic system, it was a social system promising
a new way of life.
8Shift in Management Attitudes
- Could the existing class society be transformed
into a new mass society, where goods are mass
produced and mass marketed to an undifferentiated
mass of people? - Can mass media and mass production help create a
standardized mass consumer?
9Transformation to mass society
- Industrialist capitalists sought to rationalize
and massify the whole society by altering
peoples consumption habits. - Their goal break down individual habits and
replace them with standardized mass habits. - Above all, they needed to promote the ideology of
consumption. - Utilize the emerging capitalist mass media for
advertising the virtues of consumerism.
10Henry Fords America
- In 1910 Henry Ford perfected the assembly line,
increasing output by 600. - Now products could be marketed beyond the
relatively small middle class to the vast working
class, but there were several hurdles. - 1. The working class subscribed to old values,
like thrift and moderation. - 2. Low wages.
- 3. Long hours on the job.
11Henry Fords America
- 1920s-era solutions
- 1. Promote a new set of values extolling the
virtues of the consumer way of life - Youth and the value of remaining young at all
cost - Progress, as linked to consumer behavior
- Affluent materialism and the good life
- Upper-middle class lifestyle as normalcy
- conspicuous consumption
- status consciousness
- fear of failure or being labeled old or obsolete
for failing to keep up with the Jones - 2. Higher wages and credit-purchases.
- 3. Shorter hours, providing they spent their time
consuming mass-made products.
12The Doctrine of Separate Spheres
- Family life and work life were promoted by
industry as separate spheres of life. - Work was harsh and competitive a jungle.
- Family was a haven, warm, fun, cooperative.
- Expect fulfillment from your family, NOT your
job. - These new expectations served the private
interests of industry (low job/wage
expectations), but led to unrealistically high
expectations about family life. - Industrial capitalists promoted new gender roles
for these separate spheres. - White males as breadwinner, focused on job.
- White females as housewife/shopper she is the
primary household or family consumer.
13The Rise of Modern Advertising
- The job of the line manager at a factory is to
ensure the efficient production of goods the job
of the advertiser is to ensure the efficient
consumption of goods. Stuart Ewen
14Modern ads emerged by the 1920s
- Ads before the 1920s
- Emphasis on rational appeals.
- Directed mainly toward the middle class because
the working class lacked spending money. - Not very effective in producing mass profits.
- Ads after 1920
- Emphasis on emotional, non-rational appeals.
- Directed toward the masses, including the working
class. - Relatively effective in producing mass profits.
15Modern Advertising Tactics
- The old way to sell a product was to make a
somewhat rational appeal. Logical or critical
thinking was often encouraged. - This tactic is only moderately successful.
- A more successful way is to sell the sizzle, not
the steak. The new ad approach was designed to
manufacture desire. - Use non-rational appeals. Discourage critical
thinking in the general population. - Use emotionalized appeals.
- Attack the social self and offer your product as
the solution.
16Modern advertising
- An unhappy consumer is more profitable than a
citizen who is secure and happy with who they
are. - Some ads even invent problems and illnesses (ie
ring around the collar, teeth not white, etc). - Many ads imply that unless one consumes the
proper products, they will never be socially
accepted. - Modern consumerism requires constant, regularized
taken-for-granted consumption habits that are
rooted in emotional needs. Ads teach us to need
things. They instill consumerism.
17Effects of modern advertising
- A mass society that takes for granted the virtues
of consumerism without grasping the real costs. - Psychological self-esteem issues, especially in
women, regarding the self and its supposed flaws. - Discouraged use of critical thinking abilities
fosters a naive and ignorant public. - Spill-over into politics. Politicians now
typically utilize non-rational appeals and rely
on these ad techniques to manipulate a
poorly-informed public.
18The Ideal American?
- By the 1920s, ads promoted a monolithic and
narrow archetype of the pure American - White
- Anglo
- Middle class
- Civilized as measured by their consumption
habits - All other categories of people where somehow less
American. - Monolithic stereotypes served the interests of
private industry.
19Absurdity of ads
- Ironically, ads promoted industrys products as
solutions to social problems that industry itself
helped to cause alienation, stress headaches,
health problems, pollution, obesity, etc. - The same corporation that sells the fast food
that causes obesity may sell the diet pill that
supposedly solves the problem of obesity. - The diet pill is often portrayed as a miracle
pill in the typical ad style that uses a
non-rational, emotionalized appeal.
20As large private corporations gained influence
they altered the social landscape
- 1. Private corporations affected the curriculum,
funding, and policies of schools to serve their
own self-interest. - 2. Art and aesthetics became commercialized, with
many artists serving the interests of private
industry. Also, should profits determine worth? - 3. By 1930, 80 of all U.S. cities had only one
newspaper as newspaper oligopolies emerged, thus
increasing corporate hegemonic control over the
media. - 4. U.S. politicians now use the same questionable
ad techniques used by industry.
21Leisure as escapism
- As the American culture became increasingly
massified (mass media, mass products, assembly
line working conditions, etc), escapist leisure
activities rose. - 1920s ads promoted escapist pleasures like
shopping, movie theaters, and spectator sports. - Today, television programming is fundamentally
escapist. - Escapist leisure is class-based, with the working
class more likely to seek it out than the middle
class.
22The consumer mindset
- Colonized and insecure, because it isnt free to
do as it pleases. Rather, it is dependent on the
styles and ideas that corporations want to sell. - Status conscious
- Keep up with the Jones
- Trivial pursuit (of trivial issues, products)
- Mildly neurotic, obsessed and insecure
23The issue of control
- A key issue in modern society involves how much
control we have over our own lives. - Work life?
- Industry has historically resisted workplace
democracy. - Mystification of work activities has led to
meaningless jobs and little worker influence over
what is being made. - Family life?
- Industry attacks parental authority and
substitutes itself as the expert.
24The crisis of mass society
- As assembly-line jobs made work life more bland
and meaningless, industry promoted the consumer
way of life as the means to happiness. - Industry redefined the role of the citizen from
issues of self-determination to issues of
obedience to new and improved styles. - Advertising played a crucial role in shifting
mainstream ideology toward the interests of
private industry.
25The historical record of private industry from a
critical perspective
- Exploitation of workers while resisting
democratic reforms, workplace reforms, pro-family
policies - Exploitation of racism, sexism, ageism
- Over-rationalization of the workplace
- Instilling and promoting personal insecurity
- Promotion of monopoly and oligopoly
- All of these behaviors
- 1. Impose control over people
- 2. Serve the private interest
- 3. Violate the public interest
26Epilogue
- Television grew in the 1950s as a powerful new
tool of industry. - 1950s TV programming was highly escapist and
propagandistic, and it remains so today. - The ultimate triumph of industrial capitalism has
been in its ability to define the conditions of
our daily lives without being significantly
challenged.
27End of this section