ABSTRACT

Advertising is no longer on the defensive. It has survived the snobbery of the 50s, the conspiracy theories of the 60s and the semiology of the 70s to be embraced and apotheosised by the 80s.
The Consumerist Manifesto is the first book to examine the advertising process from within the agency itself, and from the wider perspective of advertising's dual relationship as both consumer and object, with contemporary cultural theory. Martin Davidson follows the creation of successful campaigns and explores how advertising has succeeded in setting the tone for even larger aspects of our material and personal lives.
With the impact of postmodernism and popular culture, and the subsequent collapse of the old anti-advertising critique, the books reveals how advertising came to be embraced as the idiom of the enterprise culture, and how it became central to the decades assault on traditional notions of political and cultural value. Martin Davidson explores the wider implications of advertising's dominance for cultural theory, art, anthropology and language.
Finally, Martin Davidson asks how this new critique will have to develop if the industry's new credibility is to be maintained.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|38 pages

Objects of Desire

How advertising works

chapter 2|36 pages

Designer Decades

Advertising and the 80s

chapter 3|21 pages

Martian Postcards

Culture as critique

chapter 4|25 pages

Reasoning the Need

Advertising, art and junk

chapter 5|21 pages

Page Traffic

The language of advertising

chapter 6|31 pages

Knocking Copy

Advertising and its critics

chapter 7|10 pages

Lost in the Post

Advertising and the future