Advertising and the Transformation of American Society, 1865-1920

Available
Product Details
Price
$114.00
Publisher
Praeger
Publish Date
Pages
224
Dimensions
6.32 X 9.02 X 0.88 inches | 1.03 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780313268014

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About the Author
JAMES D. NORRIS is Professor of History and Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Northern Illinois University. His previous books include Frontier Iron, AZn: A History of the American Zinc Company, Politics and Patronage in the Gilded Age (with Arthur Shaffer), and R.G. Dun & Co. 1841-1900: The Development of Credit Reporting in the Nineteenth Century. Norris is a specialist in business and economic history and is currently working on a study comparing the development of businesses on the American frontier.
Reviews
"Business historian Norris analyzes the transformation of the US to national markets and a consumption society, a transformation he attributes primarily to economic abundance and advertising. The author stresses magazine advertising and the change from product-oriented to consumer-oriented advertising which was designed to create rather than just fill demand. He traces the marketing of important products from patent medicines and sewing machines to soaps and cosmetics. The author concludes that sodas, cigarettes, and automobiles made advertising (and consumption) 'come of age' by 1920. Chapter titles--'Any Fool Can Make Soap, ' 'Leisure Time for Ladies, ' 'I'd Walk a Mile for a Camel'--suggest his approach and integration of specific issues with general conditions and offers a useful description of this changing society, from rural and local and relatively restricted to urban and abundant. Norris draws interesting conclusions about advertisements and their impact on American society. Heavily footnoted, extensive bibliography, limited index. Illustrations of advertisements and tables of data for the period. More focused than Stuart Ewen, Captains of Consciousness (1976). College and public library collections."-Choice
"James D. Norris, Dean of Northern Illinois University, has written a very readable, interesting and well researched book on the changes in America from the end of the Civil War to the end of World War I. Advertising serves as his window for viewing the evolution of this young nation into a mature manufacturing powerhouse. This volume is easily accessible to both the general public and trained professional."-Society & Government Economists Bulletin
?James D. Norris, Dean of Northern Illinois University, has written a very readable, interesting and well researched book on the changes in America from the end of the Civil War to the end of World War I. Advertising serves as his window for viewing the evolution of this young nation into a mature manufacturing powerhouse. This volume is easily accessible to both the general public and trained professional.?-Society & Government Economists Bulletin
?Business historian Norris analyzes the transformation of the US to national markets and a consumption society, a transformation he attributes primarily to economic abundance and advertising. The author stresses magazine advertising and the change from product-oriented to consumer-oriented advertising which was designed to create rather than just fill demand. He traces the marketing of important products from patent medicines and sewing machines to soaps and cosmetics. The author concludes that sodas, cigarettes, and automobiles made advertising (and consumption) 'come of age' by 1920. Chapter titles--'Any Fool Can Make Soap, ' 'Leisure Time for Ladies, ' 'I'd Walk a Mile for a Camel'--suggest his approach and integration of specific issues with general conditions and offers a useful description of this changing society, from rural and local and relatively restricted to urban and abundant. Norris draws interesting conclusions about advertisements and their impact on American society. Heavily footnoted, extensive bibliography, limited index. Illustrations of advertisements and tables of data for the period. More focused than Stuart Ewen, Captains of Consciousness (1976). College and public library collections.?-Choice