Culture and Consumption II: Markets, Meaning, and Brand Management

Culture and Consumption II: Markets, Meaning, and Brand Management

by Grant David McCracken
ISBN-10:
025321761X
ISBN-13:
9780253217615
Pub. Date:
07/22/2005
Publisher:
Indiana University Press
ISBN-10:
025321761X
ISBN-13:
9780253217615
Pub. Date:
07/22/2005
Publisher:
Indiana University Press
Culture and Consumption II: Markets, Meaning, and Brand Management

Culture and Consumption II: Markets, Meaning, and Brand Management

by Grant David McCracken

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Overview

A follow-up to Grant McCracken's groundbreaking Culture and Consumption, this new book trades the usual platitudes about the consumer society for a more detailed, exacting anthropological treatment. Each section of the book pairs a brief essay with an academic article. The essay is designed for a quick, provocative glimpse of the topic; the article provides a deeper anthropological treatment. The book opens with a broadside against the now thoroughly conventionalized attack on the consumer culture. Essays follow on homes, cars, people, and social mobility; celebrities, consumerism, and self-invention; museums and the power of objects; the anthropology of advertising; and marketing, meaning management, and value. Like McCracken's previous volume, this new book is an engaging, informative, and eye-opening foray into modern consumer culture.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780253217615
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Publication date: 07/22/2005
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Grant McCracken is a member of The MIT Laboratory for Branding Cultures and a visiting scholar at McGill University and author of several books, including Culture and Consumption (IUP, 1988), Big Hair, and Transformation.

Table of Contents

Contents
Acknowledgments

I. Introduction
1. Living in the Material World
2. On Oprah
II. Homes
3. The Drew Bledsoe Paradox: The Mysterious Home Economics of Homo economicus
4. Homeyness: A Cultural Account of One Constellation of Consumer Goods and Meanings
III. Automobiles
5. Calling Grease
6. When Cars Could Fly: Raymond Loewy, John Kenneth Galbraith, and the 1954 Buick
IV. Celebrities
7. Marilyn Monroe, Inventor of Blondness
8. Who Is the Celebrity Endorser? Cultural Foundations of the Endorsement Process
V. Museums
9. The Strange Power of Uncle Meyer's Wallet
10. Culture and Culture at the Royal Ontario Museum: An Anthropological Approach to a Marketing Problem
VI. Advertising
11. Taking Madison Avenue by Storm
12. Advertising: Meaning versus Information
VII. Marketing
13. Sarah Zupko, Meet Mrs. Woolworth
14. Meaning-Management: An Anthropological Approach to the Creation of Value

Bibliography
Index

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