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Insights Into  Consumer Behavior From Historical Studies of Advertising 
 
Richard W. Pollay, University of British  Columbia 
 

Richard  W. Pollay (1987) ,"Insights Into Consumer Behavior From Historical 
Studies of  Advertising", in NA - Advances in Consumer Research Volume 14, 
eds. Melanie  Wallendorf and Paul Anderson, Provo, UT : Association for 
Consumer Research,  Pages: 447-450. 

http://acrwebsite.org/volumes/6737/volumes/v14/NA-14


 
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<ACRVOLUME>Advances in Consumer Researc,  ,  Pages 447-450 
INSIGHTS INTO CONSUMER BEHAVIOR FROM  HISTORICAL STUDIES OF ADVERTISING 
<ACRAUTHOR>Richar, University of British  Columbia 
Our understanding of our contemporary  consumer culture is often 
handicapped by our very immersion in it. Surrounded by  trees we can only dimly 
perceive the shape of the forest. This is not much of a  problem in Studying 
the 
consumer in microcosm, but we poorly study the context  in which consumers 
operate, the consumer culture in gestalt. While many of the  managerially 
significant questions can be (at least partially) addressed through  study of 
the consumer in microcosm, the socially significant questions cannot.  
Generally speaking the more meaningful the issue, especially to those beyond 
our  
discipline's managerial bounds, the less valuable is conventional consumer  
behavior. History is one of (hopefully) many alternative intellectual 
approaches  which offer important supplemental perspective OD consumer 
behavior. 
The realization of this potential of historical methods can be  illustrated 
through the methods and conclusions of recent studies in the history  of 
advertising. Three such studies will demonstrate both a diversity of  
documents studies and a diversity of inferences that can be drawn. The oldest  
such 
study is Curti's (1967) analysis of the changing concept of human nature  
held by the advertising trade from 1890 until the post-war period. This 
analysis  is based on careful reading of the texts, professional journals, and 
trade  papers such as Printer's Ink. Recent work by Marchand (1985) 
illustrates, for  the 1920-30s, the richness of insights derivable when careful 
analysis of the  content and tableaux of advertisements is supplemented with 
information from  archives, trade press, biographies, interviews, etc. Leiss, 
et 
al. (1986)  conducted a content analysis that benefits from its intellectual 
eclecticism.  Rooted in the field of communication studies, the core 
concepts are drawn from  anthropology, as the authors delineate the changing 
relationship of Americans  and their goods. 
These three papers vary in the way that they rely on and reflect:  a) the 
theory about consumers guiding the production of marketing's most visible  
and vibrant tool, advertising; b) the culture of the organizations producing  
these ads; c) the ads themselves, and d) the culture of consumption. Each of 
 these handles on history has some value. Let us consider each of these 
studies  after a quick overview of the literature of historical aspects of 
advertising  . 
SOME HISTORY OF ADVERTISING HISTORY 
Not so long ago, many authors expressed dismay at the paucity and  quality 
of major works discussing advertising's history and influential role in  
modern industrial society. Since then we have gone from famine to feast. In the 
 past very few years there has been 8 sudden wealth of high quality books 
written  by very capable and insightful historians. Barnow's The Sponsor 
(1978) discusses  the modern television age. Pope's The Making of Modern 
Advertising (1983)  describes the emergence and institutional development of 
modern 
agencies and  practices at the turn of the century. Fox's The Mirror Makers 
<1984) uses a  group biographical approach to capture the development of 
variouS schools of  advertising practice and thought, and Schudson's 
Advertising<. The Uneasy  Persuasion (1984) is a sociological view which 
sensitively 
covers the agency  client relationship and its constraints. But except for 
Schudson, few of these  works dealt effectively or at length with the social 
content and cultural  influence of advertising. While often fascinating and 
colorful in the  characters, campaigns and conflicts described, both 
marketing scholars and  historians missed a comprehensive discussion of the 
culture 
of consumption and  the role advertising played in the emergent culture of 
abundance. 
PERCEIVED "HUMAN NATURE" 
The first, and for a long time only, historical study of  advertising of 
relevance to consumer behavior was Curti's (1967) analysis of the  changing 
concept of human nature held by the advertising profession Judged by  study of 
the texts and trade press, the observed changes are provocative but a  
little uncertain in their interpretation In general he notes an evolution from 
a 
 "rational" view to a "din/irrational" view, but how this is to be 
interpreted is  debatable, through no fault of his 
The observed changes can be obviously taken at face value as  exactly what 
they are, the models employed by the makers of advertising Beyond  that, 
however, it is not clear if the changes in these models reflect a) the  changes 
in academic psychology, b) the increasing realization of the potency of  
advertising to change consumer behavior and guide choices, c) the evolution of 
 the professional, knowledgeable craft of copy writing as distinct in its 
craft  knowledge from media placing, the preoccupation of the previous era of 
 advertising, or d) actual changes in the nature of consumer behavior over 
this  time span, as the mass markets went from subsistence to affluence The 
root of  this uncertainty is the chicken and egg conundrum that always 
confounds  discussions of advertising, that of what is cause and what is effect 
in observed  changes Are the actual consumers changing (such) over this time 
span, or is it  just that advertisers are slowly becoming aware of the way 
people are (and have  always been)? To what extent can observed changes to 
attributed to just expanded  awareness about consumer behavior, versus true 
changes in that behavior? Since  advertisers have always been highly motivated 
to comprehend consumers, and have  many financial resources at risk and to 
bring to bear on this issue, presumably  it has not taken then 80 years to 
comprehend what was always true Presumably  then the observed changes must be 
assumed to be in part reflective of true  changes 
The major shift that Curti (1967) notes is the shift from a view  of the 
typical consumer as a rational, self interested individual to a view of  
consumers as inherently irrational, fickle, malleable, emotional, even though  
still egocentric While both of these views have coexisted throughout the  
twentieth century, and still do, the rational view was dominant in the trade  
press at the turn of the century and shortly thereafter This was not the 
result  of naivetI of professionals, for the academic psychology of the era 
also  
emphasized "reason" and "will" over emotion or feelings This rational view  
argued for no nonsense copy styles, suitable for the "hardheaded" reader 
whose  time was a scarce commodity Self interest of these consumers was seen 
as  including the immediate family, but the presumption then (as now) was 
that the  consumer was able and adept at a careful calculus of costs and 
benefits and was  unswayed by emotions, symbols, puffery, flattery, impulse, 
etc 
In contrast the irrational view, which came into full dominance by  1930, 
assumed that consumers were basically emotional and often fools Immersed  in 
their feelings of hopes and sorrows, basically vain, prejudiced, eager for  
compliments and flattery, these consumers were malleable and susceptible to  
suggestion, conditioned by repetition of pleasant stimuli, appealed to 
easily by  sentimentality and sensationalism and that all of this was of far 
sore  importance in determining purchase behavior than consideration of product 
 utility Basic fears and drives such as social shame, competition, seeking 
of  approval and social status were commonly recognized in the advertising 
trade  long before social science academics "discovered" other-directed 
personalities  in modern society This dir view of consumers is a long tradition 
as shown by the  Printer's Ink (1891) editorial observation and admonition to 
"write to impress  fools Don't prepare (ads) for ministers and college 
professors, but for ignore  uses, and you will just as likely catch college 
professors " By the post war  period the prevailing view was that, however 
rational consumer decisions might  seem, or be portrayed by academics or 
consumers themselves, consumer choices  were actually deeply influenced by 
emotional 
forces conscious, subconscious and  unconscious 
Logic for Living 
Marchand's (1985) research and reporting, undertaken with the  goals of 
interpreting the contribution of advertising to "the vocabulary and  syntax of 
American common discourse," studied some 180,000 ads from major  periodicals 
for persistent patterns Drawing heavily on the trade press and  agency 
archives as well, he  asses an impressive and eclectic array of  information 
about the backgrounds, constraints and biases of the advertising  practitioners 
The study focuses on the 1920/39, by when the advertising industry  was 
relatively substantial and nature Ads the selves were increasingly given  over 
the portrayal of consumers and consumption situations, providing vignettes  
of life-style, priorities and a logic of living, a rhetoric of consumption 
The  boasting self-assurance of the 20s and the troubled self-doubts of the 
early 30s  lead to a trade press filled with revealing gossip In later years, 
a rising  sophistication lead to ads of greater subtlety, more covert 
communication and a  trade press that was coy in the face of competition, 
critics, government  regulators and cynical consumers Thus, this period is well 
chosen as an era to  begin this social history 
After a thoughtful theoretical and methodological introduction is  a 
portrait of ad agents and their function just prior to 1920, drawn largely  
from 
the trade press Caught up in the exhilaration of change, agencies were  
functioning OD an unprecedented scale and tempo The expanded role for  
advertising before WWI is illustrated in extended discussion of Crisco's 3  
million 
dollar campaign, the Sunkist effort and success at branding a commodity,  the 
development of institutional advertising and the use of advertising a part  
of the war effort.  The establishment of advertising as an integral element  
of corporate marketing strategy was at least symbolically completed by 
Henry  Ford's reluctant capitulation to its use in launching the Model A in 
1927, but  throughout these days the advertising community was doing such to 
dispel the  imagery of snake oil suckering inherited from P T Barnum and 
nefarious patent  medicines of the 19th century 
The evolution toward a modern marketing orientation is  demonstrated in 
increased attention to consumer benefits, rather than product  attributes, and 
the shift in copy tone from salesman to confidant, a tactic of  
personalization of appeal (see also Pollay 1985) These are exampled in three  
major case 
histories; the marketing of Fleischmann's yeast (as a vitamin source,  and 
later as a laxative), the dramatic and influential success of Listerine (as  
an astringents aftershave, dandruff cure, douche, etc but most successfully 
as a  cure for halitosis, and only later for colds and DOW dental plaque), 
and the  launching of the totally new product concept of Kotex, a challenge 
to  communicate in good taste 
In a manner consistent with, but supple ental to, Fox's Mirror  Makers, 
(1984), Marchand turns to the people who created the advertising  Capturing the 
conflicting approaches to professional status (technical practical  
expertise v cultural leadership and uplift by means of high educational  
standards, 
public service and dignity of behavior), he finds this conflict  permeating 
the trade debate about copy styles, media choice, and agency  selection But 
transcending this conflict, the industry increasingly presented  itself as 
an ambassador Of the consumer population and their interests The  character 
of the personnel serving in this role is displayed in the results of a  
study of the backgrounds, occupational attitudes, social and institutional ties 
 
of persons employed by the twenty largest agencies This discloses a largely 
sale  culture, with good discussion of the small but sometimes influential 
roles of  women and (less often) ethnic minorities The tendency toward an 
urban inbreeding  was countered with recruitment of staff from far and wide in 
hopes of staying  sympathetic to the great mass of common everyday "just 
folks," although this  intent was unfulfilled as staff of major agencies 
inevitably became urban elites  with life styles quite different from the hoi 
polloi 
The agency as an organizational subculture is wonderfully  described, 
giving rich life to the conflicts inherent in being courtiers to the  clients, 
being judged by improper standards, emasculated by revisions, given no  credit 
for accomplishment and victimized by tension and insecurities While no  one 
personality type dominated, the circumstances bred competition and cynicism 
 as well as craftsmanship and soon became a young man's profession Senior  
veterans complained of the ephemeral insubstantial nature of the work and a  
surprisingly large number suffered breakdowns from being habitually 
"perched on  the edge of anxiety " Using backstage tales and trade talk, 
Marchand 
shows how  this stress was handled by learning techniques for psyching one's 
self up to a  state of delirious enthusiasm, by tension reducing self 
parodies, and by  rationalizations for various "benign deceptions," those 
little 
white lies 
Practitioners viewed their audience from a "we-they" framework,  not 
unreasonably since the dominant conception was a lowest common denominator  of 
an 
"emotional, feminized mass, characterized by mental lethargy, bad taste,  
and ignorance" (p 69) Given the successes of tabloids, funnies, matinee 
movies,  and confession magazines, and the success of ads which imitated these 
in 
their  art direction, this ignoble view is understandable, especially given 
the very  limited role played by research Another view, most vividly 
portrayed in media  representations, was a more self-serving idealization of an 
affluent class  audience, more cultured and cosmopolitan. 
Throughout this period the industry drifted toward an abandonment  of the 
great genteel hope of advertising as cultural uplift This drift,  accentuated 
by the depression, is manifest in changing industry norms and  practices in 
art and copy styles, use of more intrusive media, use of bold  competitive 
campaigns, scare tactics, editorial camouflage, etc An extended  discussion 
of radio demonstrates the evolution from a reluctance to intrude into  
domestic sanctity through a variety of increasingly noisy and obvious 
techniques  
The funnies format, seen by any spokesmen as the nadir of utter 
mindlessness and  low taste, was accepted as a necessary evil, fearing that 
consumers 
would not  accept serious advice without a "dream world of frivolity and 
fantasy". 
But art direction and style involved far sore than just imitating  other 
popular media....... Art was seen as critical for its abilities to speak a  
language of emotion to less literate populations, to finesse the 
counterarguing  that words invite, and to convey dense images rich in meaning 
As happened 
again  in the 1960s, advertising embraced diverse styles of modern art 
forms,  ultimately to retreat to sentimental realism, but photographic styles 
were  dramatically altered in this period Use of color and styling played an 
important  role in the general merchandising strategy, and not just the 
formatting of ads.  Product lines were extended into multiple colors and the 
concept of  integrated aesthetic ensembles were promoted in an amazing 
diversity 
of  products; the obvious fashion items, of course, but also appliances, 
utensils,  room decor and even cameras, plumbing fixtures, and cellar boilers 
This  challenged traditional values of permanence and practicality, values 
held by the  industry as well as the population, values whose reappraisal was 
obvious in  coined phrases like "progressive obsolescence" and "creative 
waste". 
All of the preceding material is very well researched and  convincingly 
presented, but to my mind the remainder of the book is Marchand's  strongest 
contribution, his analysis of advertisements as "social tableaux"  These are 
seen not as mirrors of reality so much as of aspirations, ideology,  and the 
presumptions and biases of the ad writers through whose minds the images  
have been refracted.  Examining both the context of activities and the  roles 
of the multiple people portrayed, sensitively interpreting both text and  
visuals, the next chapters discuss the social roles of family members, the  
"great parables" and the visual cliches and then how these parables and 
cliches  were revised during the depression 
Ads gave more veneration to the "smart set, in the know" than is  now 
common. Other minorities, like ethnics or the elderly, appear infrequently  and 
usually in pronounced stereotypes The greatest amount of display and  
information is on the family unit, with men and children narrowly cast as the  
businessman (not working man) and as the hope of the future respectively 
Women's 
 roles were far more variegated, but still domestic in focus The range of  
behaviors modeled was from decorative object, to club woman, to fussy 
parent, to  the quite common metaphor of wife as domestic executive purchasing 
agent All of  this is still seen and studied in more contemporary materials 
Not yet well demonstrated in contemporary studies is the analysis  of 
common meta-themes, the great parables presented repeatedly by advertising to  
for a secular logic for living The most prevalent are the following parables 


"the first impression," tragedies of manners  that projected a persistent 
critical judgment by myriad others;  
"democracy of goods", and its negative  counterpart the "democracy of 
afflictions" which conveyed  similarities of Consumption styles and 
opportunities 
between classes quite  different in wealth and political power;  
"civilization redeemed", that would restore  the vim and vigor that Nature 
intended, counteracting either decadence or  the stresses of high strung 
modern situations;  
"the captivated child", a reflection of  popular theories that 
companionship and sweetened temptations were family  management tools superior 
to 
coercion and  discipline


These parables, especially first impressions and the captivated  child, 
were certainly metaphoric truths for the ad industry and must therefore  be 
seen at least in part as projections from their job experience_ 
The visual cliches, the ichnographic representations are manifest  in the 
display of poignant moments, entranced and worshipful gazing, heroic  
proportionings, enshrinement of objects in radiant beams, distorted perceptual  
angle and various other art techniques The common cliches were: 


"Executive dominion," viewed through  expansive windows overlooking 
miniaturized scenes;  
"family circles", where harmony and nostalgia  occur in soft focus;  
"heavenly future" urban landscapes, of  radiant alabaster cities;  
"pristine bucolic villages," whose solitary  steeples symbolize a social 
harmony with spiritual  depth


"Advertising in Overalls" covers the modifications of these  parables, 
visual cliches and ad style more generally, during the depression This  is 
interwoven with information about the early ineffective attempts to use  
advertising to counteract the psychological impact of the crash and the  
emergence 
of new agencies with an associated shift in style in both copy and  layout 
Except for trace remnants, the elite effete styles seen in the 1920s give  
ground to hardboiled, shirtsleeve copy styles of "buckeye simplicity " Art 
shows  strained determination in clenched fists and faces and layouts become 
bolder,  colder, cluttered and literally blacker, dense with ink But style 
changed more  than substance as copy premises were familiar The advertising 
parables were  slightly revised, primarily increasing their severity The 
importance of  captivating children to eat and study well, for example, was 
made 
vivid with  threats of skinniness leading to social mortification and the 
"unraised hand"  predicating future failure All of this was underscored with a 
"failed fathers"  subtheme The trade press discloses self-flagellation, pep 
talks, heroic  portrayals of men fighting with their backs to the wall, and 
inspirational  messages of mutual reassurance, holding out images of hope for 
themselves as  well as their economic community 
The last chapter, the "therapeutics of advertising," recapitulates  and 
synthesizes the main themes with fresh examples, citations and arguments  
Assessing probable effects, as distinct from the industry's claims of  
importance, Marchand examines how advertising exposes audiences not just to  
product 
attributes but also to standards of taste, social correctness and  potential 
psychological satisfactions; a schooling of sorts that provides a  language, 
both visual and verbal, that aids the assimilation into a modern  culture 
of high technology, complex economic and social relationships, and  urbane 
sophistications The integrating themes are urbanity, complexity and the  
problem of scale; proliferating choices and the vacuum of advice; and the  
re-personalization of American life 
Attitudes Toward Objects 
Another historical study demonstrates how a semiological content  analysis 
of advertisements can be informative about the relationship people have  to 
the objects advertised This helps us understand the materialism on our  
culture by tracing the evolution of attitudes and affect presumed and displayed 
 
in the ads Leiss et al (1986) wrote about advertising from a communications 
 orientation, greatly enriched by its historical perspective An eclectic 
analysis  theoretically, their study also draws heavily on anthropological 
concepts In  summarizing their work, they note four eras during the twentieth 
century, within  which there are different cultural frames for goods This 
periodiziation, like  all such historical periodizations, is a simplism that 
defines what is  distinctive or emergent in each era while generalizing over 
any exceptions and  cases which echo previous forms or presage forms to 
become more common at later  dates 
They observe that advertising tactics evolved during the twentieth  century 
through four identified phases, spanning roughly two decades for each  
phase While this is not totally consistent with more detailed analysis of  
changing tactics (Pollay 1985), the trends identified are unmistakable Ads were 
 
at first informative, descriptive of product attributes and the  inherent 
utilities In the 20s and 30s ads became more symbolic,  with portrayals of 
prototypical elites shown with the products as props to a  successful life 
After the second world war, ads became more  personalized, promising consumer 
gratifications in an intimate manner  of a confidant More recently, lifestyle 
advertising displays  people and places, but also an attitude through 
techniques of film editing and  use of sound tracks These four periods are 
identified as displaying a cultural  attitude toward goods as idolatry, 
iconology, 
narcissism and  totemism. 
Since these terms are unfamiliar to most consumer researchers,  some 
elaboration is in order Idolatry is the chosen typification of the period  
1890-1925 because the great bulk of ads in this era were messages which convey 
a  
tone of veneration of products This was reflective, perhaps, of the awe 
induced  by the abundances of rapidly expanding productive capacities in the 
land 
The  sales strategy was direct and "rational", describing the products and 
their  qualities, linking these to common sense advantages such as saving 
tine, money  or energy The texts are often dispassionate and elaborately 
reasoned,  presumptive of audience intensity of interest and willingness to 
read 
great  quantities of advertising copy Manufacturers displayed abundant pride 
in their  lavish descriptions and art work used a number of cliched 
portrayals of putting  products on pedestals, in halos, or in frames that 
elevate 
the product and its  apparent stature Ad copy turns around themes of status, 
family, social authority  and a kind of "white magic" wherein the products 
seen to capture or control some  potent by vaguely specified forces of nature 
Iconology typifies the period from 1925-1945, they argue, as the  symbolic 
properties of the product come to dominate the utilitarian properties  in 
the advertising. Presentations no longer focused on the manifest properties  
or appearances of the good, or on allegations about the personal needs. The  
earlier denotative discourse become subordinated to a more expansive 
connotative  discourse "rooted in suggestion, metaphor, analogy and inference 
(Leiss, 1986, p  284) " The focal point shifts from the object to the person as 
intended user,  but only part way. The goods are still icons with captured 
qualities, such as  cars symbolizing modernity, soaps symbolic of family 
integrity, shoes signifying  sobriety or status. Similarly, the art work used 
exemplars of reigning social  values, not typical consumers, showing a "class, 
not mass" appeal The ads  themselves display a system of meanings far more 
than they evoke or represent  feelings These were not a psychologically 
sophisticated set of productions,  effective because they induce affect. 
Instead, 
products and person displayed  seem frozen in time and space and reader 
involvement and identification is  relatively passive 
With the narcissism phase, 1945-1965, the focal point moved closer  to the 
person/viewer and brings emotion more clearly into view .The discourse  
displays greater psychological depth, and in its portrayals of the inner most  
regions of the psyche, the meaning of products were presumably more likely to 
 resonate for the reader and to become internalized Consumers were 
encouraged to  consider in more intimate direct terms what the products would 
do for 
them  personally and selfishly.  Ads offered products as parts of a total  
personality, and the art style showed faces gazing directly at the reader to 
 create identification. It's interesting to note that this advertising 
format  predates the cultural attention to the "me generation" identified in 
the 
1970s.  The themes of narcissistic advertising were self transformation 
toward glamour,  romance, sensuality and the "black magic" of being able to 
control the  perceptions and attitudes of others towards ones self 
Totemism is the last phase they identify This term is chosen  because 
totemic objects constitute a code of social meanings, providing for the  
"signification and valuation of personas, occasions, functions and situations  
(ibid 
, p 295) " In this period, features of previous forms of advertising are  
recalled and synthesized, such that utility, symbolism and narcissism are  
aggregated under products as signifiers. Consumption is meant to be a 
spectacle,  a public enterprise, with the products and serving as enables and 
badges 
for  social collectives, what Boorstin (1973) identified as consumption 
communities,  or what we more commonly see as lifestyle groups At times the 
brands or trade  marks are totally abstracted from the products and literally 
worn as badges of  identification by consumer citizens Today's products serve 
as sources of  identity, with clan membership purchasable in the democratic 
marketplace so that  anyone who chose can wear the props of "a macho man" 
or "a yuppie" or the any  highly fragmented groups such as joggers, bicycle 
racers, windsurfers, etc. All  that's required is buying the correct gear, 
whose meaning is conveyed through  its advertising and use of symbols. 
Consistent with this group related  consumption pattern, the ads emphasize 
friendships, groups and leisure social  activities, with the emphasis on an 
activity 
DISCUSSION 
These three studies demonstrate some of the variety of approaches  possible 
in historical studies and the various inferences that can be made. The  
analysis of trade concepts of human nature shed light on the intellectual  
history of the field of consumer behavior, the growing realization among  
advertisers of their capacity to influence consumers choices and perhaps, the  
changing nature of the average citizen in the increasingly consumption focused  
society. The analysis of advertising for a particular era to identify the  
meta-themes in common usage specifies that parables for living that 
advertising  was promoting among the population, and a series of such studies 
would 
be a  wonderful history of modern culture. The analysis of themes and 
tactics of  advertisements over a long time span permits the identification of 
macro trends,  such as the slowly changing relationship of consumers and the 
goods that they  own and use. These changes impact what kinds of goods are 
sought, what criteria  of employed in choices and how these goods are utilized 
- in short everything  that effects their meaningfulness 

REFERENCES 
Barnouw, Eric (1978), he Sponsor Notes on a Modern Potentate NY:  Oxford 
University Press. 
Boorstin, Daniel (1973), The Americans The Democratic Experience  NY Random 
House. 
Curti, Merle (1967), "The Changing Concept of 'Human Nature' in  the 
Literature of American Advertising," Business History Review, Vol 41, $4  
(Winter), 335-357. 
Fox, Stephen (1984), The Mirror Makers A History of American  Advertising 
and its Creators NY William Morrow. 
Leiss, William, Stephen Kline and Sut Jhally (1986), Social  Communication 
in Advertising Persons Products and Images of Well Being NY  Metheun. 
Marchand, Roland (1985), Advertising the American Dream Making Way  for 
Modernity 1920-1940 Berkeley University of California Press. 
Pollay, Richard W (1985), "The Subsiding Sizzle A Descriptive  History of 
Print Advertising, 1900-1980," Journal of Marketing, Vol 49 (Summer),  24-37. 
Pope, Daniel (1983), The Making of Modern Advertising NY Basic  Books . 
(editorial) (1981), Printer's Ink, Vol 5 (December 30), D.  809. 
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