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Marketing food, making meaning: Themes in twentieth-century American food advertising

Posted on:2007-07-04Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The University of OklahomaCandidate:Robertson, Helen JFull Text:PDF
GTID:1459390005981395Subject:Geography
Abstract/Summary:
Though both advertising and the idea of nature are ubiquitous in American culture, little work has been done to examine how the former constructs the latter. Advertising is everywhere, and nature is everywhere in advertising---as a background, a concept, a place, a commodity. This study uses advertising for food in magazines from 1920-1975 as an entry point into an exploration of the narratives of nature used by the advertising industry over a 50-year period to frame the themes used to market foods. It describes how four different themes, memory, place, health, and convenience, were used throughout this period in food advertising, and how each of these themes embodies different narratives of nature. These narratives include nature as an idyllic past, nature as a paradise or pastoral setting, fresh and untouched, nature as both a good raw material and a dangerous threat, and nature as a lifestyle problem.
Keywords/Search Tags:Nature, Advertising, Food, Themes
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