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"You can tell the ideals
of a nation by its advertisements." Norman
Douglas
"[The
advertiser articulates]...a novel magic which offers to meet the familiar
pains of a particular society and history, to soften or to sharpen ambition,
bitterness, solitude, lust, failure and rapacity."
Fred Inglis
Advertising
is
- paid
for
- a way
of promoting products, services or information
- a form
of communication (between manufacturer and consumer)
- a physical
commodity
- an integral
part of pop culture
- an important
economic force
- a part
of our urban landscape
The
analysis of advertising is an integral part of Media Studies. Advertising
manifests itself in all known media forms, and is constantly seeking
new media, new channels of communication. Through looking at advertising
we can learn not only how the most simple narratives are constructed
(a print ad is simpler than a magazine article, a TVC is simpler than
a feature film, although they use the same narrative techniques), but
how ideas can be communicated at great speed, through the use of single
images and words.
For a basic
definition, check out the GCSE
pages.
DISCUSS...
- Advertisements
create false wants and encourage the production and consumption of
things that are incompatible with the fulfilment of genuine and urgent
human needs.
- Advertising is
economically necessary and has brought many benefits to society.
- Advertising is
an irrational system which appeals to our emotions and to anti-social
feelings which have nothing to do with the goods on offer.
- Audiences are
completely free to ignore advertising therefore it cannot brainwash
people.
- Advertisements
usually suggest that material gain is the only route to social success
and happiness.
- Advertising increases
the sales of mass-produced goods and therefore stimulates the economy.
- Advertising creates
jobs and prosperity
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