ABSTRACT

Modern advertising was created in the US between 1870 and 1920 when advertisers and the increasingly specialized advertising industry that served them crafted means of reliable access to and knowledge of audiences.

This highly original and accessible book re-centers the story of the invention of modern advertising on the question of how access to audiences was streamlined and standardized. Drawing from late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century materials, especially from the advertising industry’s professional journals and the business press, chapters on the development of print media, billboard, and direct mail advertising illustrate the struggles amongst advertisers, intermediaries, audience-sellers, and often-resistant audiences themselves. Over time, the maturing advertising industry transformed the haphazard business of getting advertisements before the eyes of the public into a market in which audience attention could be traded as a commodity.

This book applies economic theory with historical narrative to explain market participants’ ongoing quests to expand the reach of the market and to increase the efficiency of attention harvesting operations. It will be of interest to scholars of contemporary American advertising, the history of advertising more generally, and also of economic history and theory.

chapter 1|30 pages

Introduction

Audience attention as commodity, commodification as historical process

chapter 2|47 pages

Packaging readers

Newspaper and magazine advertising

chapter 3|23 pages

Pricing the eyes of passersby

Outdoor advertising

chapter 4|41 pages

Home invasion

Advertising delivered door to door

chapter 5|21 pages

Conclusion

Multimedia demands on the resource of attention