ABSTRACT

This book argues for the study of consumption and its relationship with media images, particularly advertising, from a cultural perspective. Focused on Brazil, it draws on decades of research by the author and engages with theory and concepts from a range of classic anthropological works. The chapters examine how advertising professionals view their craft, the resistance to capitalism amongst native Brazilians, images of women and their bodies in magazines, and the case of the first soccer player to become a national media celebrity. Rocha supports the study of consumption as a classification system that materializes culture and creates relations between people and goods. The book presents advertising as a mode of magical thinking that mediates the passage from the machine-driven sphere of production to the humanized sphere of consumption, converting meaningless impersonal things into goods that have name, origin, identity and purpose. It will be of interest to anthropologists, sociologists and others working on advertising, marketing, communications, and consumer research.

chapter 1|9 pages

Guilt and pleasure

Challenges and possibilities for understanding consumer culture

part I|64 pages

Perspectives on consumption through fieldwork experiences

chapter 2|18 pages

Totemism in the market

Lévi-Strauss as an inspiration for consumption research

chapter 3|22 pages

A tribe of white collars

Bricoleurs in the business of advertising

chapter 4|22 pages

Against capital

The resistance to economic thought among the Terena of central Brazil

part II|62 pages

Perspectives on consumption through media images

chapter 5|23 pages

The woman in pieces

Advertising and the construction of feminine identity

chapter 6|19 pages

Classified beauty

Goods and bodies in women's magazines

chapter 7|18 pages

A star player in the world of goods

Marketing and the first Brazilian soccer celebrity