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University of California Press

About the Book

It has become impossible to imagine our culture without advertising. But how and why did advertising become a determiner of our self-image? Advertising the American Dream looks carefully at the two decades when advertising discovered striking new ways to play on our anxieties and to promise solace for the masses.

As American society became more urban, more complex, and more dominated by massive bureaucracies, the old American Dream seemed threatened. Advertisers may only have dimly perceived the profound transformations America was experiencing. However, the advertising they created is a wonderfully graphic record of the underlying assumptions and changing values in American culture. With extensive reference to the popular media—radio broadcasts, confession magazines, and tabloid newspapers—Professor Marchand describes how advertisers manipulated modern art and photography to promote an enduring ""consumption ethic.""


It has become impossible to imagine our culture without advertising. But how and why did advertising become a determiner of our self-image? Advertising the American Dream looks carefully at the two decades when advertising discovered striking new w

About the Author

Roland Marchand (1933-1997) was Professor of History at the University of California, Davis, and authored numerous works on American cultural history.

Reviews

"This gracefully written and beautifully illustrated book skillfully explores the complex relationships between advertising and American life in the interwar years."
American Historical Review
"The most thorough treatment of any segment of advertising's history."
American Journal of Sociology
"Roland Marchand has examined 180,000 advertisements from newspapers and magazines of the 1920s and 1930s. . . . [And, he's] survived with his critical faculties in fine order. HIs book is a magisterial and convincing study of what he found."
Business History Review
"Contributes significantly to a growing body of literature that has established the credibility of a 'consumption ethic,' and confirmed advertising to be a central institution in American culture."
American Journalism
"For persons who read historical materials only very rarely, this book is the one to read this decade for both pleasure and valuable insights. Well conceived and executed . . . this excellent work is relevant to a much wider audience than its title might suggest."
Journal of Marketing
"A convincing and perceptive analysis that provides a careful sociological portrait of advertising agency people in the 1920s and 1930s. Marchand has rare talent for bringing out things in the ads that the reader would not have seen alone."—Michael Schudson, University of California, San Diego

"This work illuminates some of the most important developments in twentieth-century America."—T.J. Jackson Lears, Rutgers University

Awards

  • Best book published by a member of the Phi Alpha Theta International Honor Society in History 1987, Phi Alpha Theta International Honor Society