Vance Packard and American Social Criticism

Vance Packard and American Social Criticism

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  • Author: Daniel Horowitz
  • Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
  • ISBN: 0807862118
  • Category : Biography & Autobiography
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 396

Vance Packard's bestselling books--Hidden Persuaders (1957), Status Seekers (1959), and Waste Makers (1960)--taught the generation that came of age in the late 1950s and early 1960s about the dangers posed by advertising, social climbing, and planned obsolescence. Like Betty Friedan and William H. Whyte, Jr., Packard (1914- ) was a journalist who played an important role in the nation's transition from the largely complacent 1950s to the tumultuous 1960s. He was also one of the first social critics to benefit from and foster the newly energized social and political consciousness of this period. Based in part on interviews with Packard, Daniel Horowitz's intellectual biography focuses on the period during which Packard left magazine writing to author his most famous works of social criticism. Horowitz traces the influence of Packard's education and early years in rural Pennsylvania, providing a deeper understanding of his thought and his later books. Packard's life, Horowitz contends, illuminates the dilemmas of a freelance social critic without inherited wealth or academic affiliation. His career also expands our understanding of how one era shaped the next, underscoring how the adversarial 1960s drew on the mass culture of the previous decade. Originally published in 1994. A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the latest in digital technology to make available again books from our distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These editions are published unaltered from the original, and are presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both historical and cultural value.


Vance Packard & American Social Criticism

Vance Packard & American Social Criticism

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  • Author: Daniel Horowitz
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN:
  • Category :
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 0


The Hidden Persuaders

The Hidden Persuaders

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  • Author: Vance Packard
  • Publisher: Ig Publishing
  • ISBN: 9780978843106
  • Category : Business & Economics
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 0

A discussion of how modern advertising attempts to control our thoughts and desires in order to make us buy the products it produces. Exploring the use of consumer motivational research and other psychological techniques, including subliminal tactics, this book shows how advertisers secretly manipulate mass desire for consumer goods and products. In addition, Packard also discusses advertising in politics, predicting the way image and personality rapidly came to overshadow real issues in the televised age.


American Social Classes in the 1950s

American Social Classes in the 1950s

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  • Author: Vance Packard
  • Publisher: Bedford/St. Martin's
  • ISBN: 9780312111809
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 215

This abridged edition of Vance Packard's 1959 The Status Seekers presents a picture of American society in the late 1950s that allows students to develop a more accurate and complex understanding of an often-caricatured era. Daniel Horowitz's introduction provides historical context, an assssment of the book's impact, and a discussion of its critical reception.


The Status Seekers

The Status Seekers

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  • Author: Vance Packard
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Social classes
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 394


The Waste Makers

The Waste Makers

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  • Author: Vance Packard
  • Publisher: Ig Publishing
  • ISBN: 9781935439370
  • Category : Business & Economics
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 0

A pioneering work from the 1960s about how the rapid growth of disposable consumer goods degraded the environmental, financial and spiritual character of western society. It exposed the increasing commercialisation of American life, when people bought things they didn't need or want. It also highlighted the concept of planned obsolescence, the 'death date' built into products. This prescient study predicted the rise of consumer culture and features an introduction by bestselling author Bill McKibben.


American Social Classes in the 1950s

American Social Classes in the 1950s

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  • Author: Vance Packard
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
  • ISBN:
  • Category : Social classes
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 228

This volume offers an abridgment of The Status Seekers, Vance Packard's influential and popular study of social status and stratification in 1950s America. An introductory essay places Packard and his book in their historical context and discusses the role that social criticism played during the nation's transition from '50s complacency to '60s turbulence. Also included are an album of cartoons, a chronology, question for consideration, a bibliography, and an index.


Class

Class

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  • Author: Paul Fussell
  • Publisher: Simon and Schuster
  • ISBN: 0671792253
  • Category : Social Science
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 212

This book describes the living-room artifacts, clothing styles, and intellectual proclivities of American classes from top to bottom.


Empire of Conspiracy

Empire of Conspiracy

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  • Author: Timothy Melley
  • Publisher: Cornell University Press
  • ISBN: 1501713000
  • Category : Social Science
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 252

Why, Timothy Melley asks, have paranoia and conspiracy theory become such prominent features of postwar American culture? In Empire of Conspiracy, Melley explores the recent growth of anxieties about thought-control, assassination, political indoctrination, stalking, surveillance, and corporate and government plots. At the heart of these developments, he believes, lies a widespread sense of crisis in the way Americans think about human autonomy and individuality. Nothing reveals this crisis more than the remarkably consistent form of expression that Melley calls "agency panic"—an intense fear that individuals can be shaped or controlled by powerful external forces. Drawing on a broad range of forms that manifest this fear—including fiction, film, television, sociology, political writing, self-help literature, and cultural theory—Melley provides a new understanding of the relation between postwar American literature, popular culture, and cultural theory. Empire of Conspiracy offers insightful new readings of texts ranging from Joseph Heller's Catch-22 to the Unabomber Manifesto, from Vance Packard's Hidden Persuaders to recent addiction discourse, and from the "stalker" novels of Margaret Atwood and Diane Johnson to the conspiracy fictions of Thomas Pynchon, William Burroughs, Don DeLillo, and Kathy Acker. Throughout, Melley finds recurrent anxieties about the power of large organizations to control human beings. These fears, he contends, indicate the continuing appeal of a form of individualism that is no longer wholly accurate or useful, but that still underpins a national fantasy of freedom from social control.


American Culture, American Tastes

American Culture, American Tastes

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  • Author: Michael Kammen
  • Publisher: Knopf
  • ISBN: 0307827712
  • Category : Social Science
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 300

Americans have a long history of public arguments about taste, the uses of leisure, and what is culturally appropriate in a democracy that has a strong work ethic. Michael Kammen surveys these debates as well as our changing taste preferences, especially in the past century, and the shifting perceptions that have accompanied them. Professor Kammen shows how the post-traditional popular culture that flourished after the 1880s became full-blown mass culture after World War II, in an era of unprecedented affluence and travel. He charts the influence of advertising and opinion polling; the development of standardized products, shopping centers, and mass-marketing; the separation of youth and adult culture; the gradual repudiation of the genteel tradition; and the commercialization of organized entertainment. He stresses the significance of television in the shaping of mass culture, and of consumerism in its reconfiguration over the past two decades. Focusing on our own time, Kammen discusses the use of the fluid nature of cultural taste to enlarge audiences and increase revenues, and reveals how the public role of intellectuals and cultural critics has declined as the power of corporate sponsors and promoters has risen. As a result of this diminution of cultural authority, he says, definitive pronouncements have been replaced by divergent points of view, and there is, as well, a tendency to blur fact and fiction, reality and illusion. An important commentary on the often conflicting ways Americans have understood, defined, and talked about their changing culture in the twentieth century.