Welcome to the course blog for "Cultures of Consumption" at Rutgers University in the Fall 2011 Semester.
Course Description
This course aims to examine the development of mass society, mass production, consumption and the American consumer from the late 19th century to the present. Areas considered may include industrialization and the development of work in relation to leisure, Worlds Fairs, the development of the advertising industry, the impact of American suburbanization on consumer behavior, television, technology, shopping, mass production and consumption.
Course Instructor: Matthew Ferguson, Department of American Studies - Rutgers University
Friday, September 30, 2011
CA Blog: Fake Community?
CA Blog: Technology in America Life
Between the 1890s and 1930s technology began to enter into people's home lives more than it ever has before. It came in the form of cameras, electric appliances, and phonographs (later replaced by radios.) In American Consumer Society, 1865-2005 Regina Lee Blaszczyk stated, "...Americans began their love affair with technologies that altered time, sound, light, and distance. Technology allowed people to join a wider community while simultaneously creating their own personal space" (p. 137). Middle class Americans would always try to keep up with the latest trends of technology. The upper class would first purchase the new item then the middle class that might not necessarily be able to afford the item would work to be able to have a Kodak camera or Victor phonograph in their parlor.
The process that people during this time would go through to get pictures developed and what they would spend for records is something this generation cannot truly relate to or appreciate because most of us have "smart phones" that allow us to take a picture and intantaneously up-load, or mupload (mobile upload), to the internet. After sending the image from our phones to the internet, people all over the world can have access to viewing the picture. Cell phones now can also play the music that we chose to play either for multiple people to listen to or just for their own listening by using a pair of headphones.
Smart phones today also allow people to make video calls and actually see the person they are talking too. Apple's iPhone 4 has many features that change the way people communicate with one another. Apple's features video (from youtube) shows all the features this cell phone offers. People during the early 1900s were overwhelmed by the ability to take an instant image and have a copy of that and today we can talk to someone across the country in real time and see this person. If there such a thing as too much technology?
In addition to all the features cell phones offer, cars are also programming themselves to accommodate cell phone users. As people who first began buying the Ford Model T would finance thier new vechile, the same holds true today. When peole first purchased personal cars, it changed the way of life for Americans; the slow paced community was changing due to the fact that people could travel further and get there quicker. Today people can make voice requests to call a friend or family member and the car will do so. Do people need to be in such constant contact with people that they cannot drive from point A to point B without making a phone call or checking social media networks? Although there have been very useful and beneficial technological advances are people allowing technology to control their lives opposed to just being a part of it?
Kristin Egnatowicz Section 80
I found some connections between this period, and present time. For example, many people are excited about the latest developments in photography and music playing technology. Another similarity I found was the exercise movement. In the 1890’s many Americans were introduced to new sports such as cycling, golf, and tennis. The book discusses cycling as “liberating for woman”. I never thought of this but if it made athletics more acceptable for woman to participate in, that makes sense. Something else I thought of while reading is how people started biking places for transportation. In the 1890’s people did not have cars, so bikes made it easier and faster. Today, people are using their bikes for a fun and more environmentally friendly mode of transportation.
Something else I learned was that in the beginning of the century, most people did not have electricity in their homes. I thought they at least had light bulbs and maybe a way to play their radios. People were afraid of electricity, and most did not have electricity until 1930. I was not surprised to learn of the fear of fires. This shows that safety was always a concern among consumers.
Music has been a part of American entertainment. In the 1800’s people would play instruments in their homes or go to the opera on occasion. With the invention of the phonographs, people could play recorded music in their homes. At the end of the century, we had cassette tapes, CD’s and digital music. People have always enjoyed listing to music to relax and it keeps getting smaller and more portable.
CA Blog: Gendered Consumerism
The social aspect of consumerism and how relations and interactions with others affect how we want to be perceived by using what we consume as a method of defining what type of people we are (or at least who we want to be). Marketing has taken advantage of this fact and through advertising, has created effective ways of selling products, merchandise, and paraphernalia by strategic advertising. These industries have also taken an extra step to gendered marketing. A type of marketing that is targeted towards women has been loosely labeled as “pink marketing” where in an interview Kristina Couzyn (MD Brand Activation) explains how marketers “tend to see female shoppers in two roles…either as a care-[giver] or as a career woman.” Although this strategy can be seen as outdated now, evidence shows how women and men were targeted differently according to social values and beliefs of what either category of gender and sexuality would be interested in.
Technology has played a major part in facilitating this gendered marketing. It seems as though technology has plagued our minds to the point where it is less used to facilitate and increase our quality of life and more utilized to parade our worth or method of self-expression, and being a man or woman means different weaknesses to marketing. Marketing strategies constantly try to find what consumers need or what they will eventually persuade them to think they need. Marketing to females as well as males was a method used in the early 20th century, especially with the boom in radio and the Jazz Age. Before discussing the rage in radio’s popularity, it is important to note the precursor to this new invention. Regina Lee Blaszczyk’s book, American Consumer Society, 1865-2005, shows evidence of such marketing when she explains how the phonograph introduced musical options into the home. The Victrola phonograph soon became a household piece of furniture that went past the outdated look into a sleeker version, which then allowed women to coordinate their furniture according to their own tastes. Women were in charge of phonographs because they were a piece of furniture and “women dominated the lively market for phonograph records” once the Victrola was introduced as an item of beauty for the home in 1906. (Blaszczyk, 142)
Fast forwarding a bit to the Jazz Age, music became a hobby and a pastime that men were able to appreciate. Blaszczyk notes that “Jazz played an especially important role in turning music listening into a male hobby” (151). The melody and style of Jazz was seen as a masculine purview that “stood in contrast to the safe, staid conventions of feminine parlor music” (151). But, lo and behold, women began embracing musical options as well once the American radio had the first romantic matinee idol for women to swoon over. The radio industry gift-wrapped singer Rudy Vallee and “as broadcasting’s answer to Hollywood’s Rudolph Valentino, Vallee attracted the attention of millions of women who swooned over his commercially sponsored radio show” (Blaszczyk , 151). In this sense, it should be noted that there is a disparity to how marketing will approach men and women, especially during the technological boom of the early 20th century.
Extra Link: George Carlin on Consumption
Section 01
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
CA Blog: Innovation for mass consumption
Friday, September 23, 2011
CA Blog: No Age Limit for Dreaming
Sample Blog: Victorian Values Return SAMPLE BLOG
Sample Blog: Hedonism in Hollywood SAMPLE BLOG
Sample Blog: Modern Innovators: College Students SAMPLE BLOG
CA Blog: Buy Now, Cry Later
Thursday, September 22, 2011
CA Blog: Can Americans still consume to innovate?
First, we had the recognition and reinvention of the social space of these massive warehouse-like stores along with the rise of urban centers and new building materials.(pg. 76) People preferred to shop with organs playing the background, without the haggling over prices, and for women more so than men at the time, a safe and comfortable environment to browse, linger, and socialize. Wasn't it that needs were satisfied in this case rather than created? This was pioneered by The Cast Iron Palace, which captured people's imaginations. Are our imaginations has also inherent to human needs?
Later we see some stores which don't follow a luxury ideal, such as A&P which embrace the store's ties to quantity production and mass consumption. (pg. 81) Now to me, this seems more of fulfilling an individual's fantasy of grandeur, fulfilling the desire for a less stressful and intense environment in which to make decisions in?
By 1890, with French glass working techniques allowing huge displays, we see the unveiling of store windows as an event people looked forward to. (pg. 83) On almost theatrical levels, individuals would witness scenes for extraordinary periods of time. How could you not dream to be what you see through the glass when it seems so fascinating and extravagant? And how could you not share the experience with everyone you knew when its that incredible, and free?
But if we are really going to see how consumerism is just satisfying needs, then we can look to the mail order catalogs. With the boom of ordering, the U.S. Post Office's initiated rural free delivery sparked Sears's skyrocketing business sales from $746,000 in 1895 to $41 million in 1908. (pg. 87-88)
Now if we look at today in light of what I have said in tandem with our reading of Colin Campbell, what do we consume in our globalized digital and non-digital worlds? Are we still in love with these incredible experiences, truly interested in the newest and best, or has our era of passion for innovation passed in America?
EDIT:
I didn't really relate this as much to present culture and trends as I suppose I should have, so let me build upon this in a way that makes the question more interesting. If we see ourselves as trying to progress to the goal of experiencing incredible things that make us awestruck, whether it be through technology, culture, society, or others, then why don't we embrace retinal scanners in the United States as they become deeply integrated in places like Seoul, Korea? Koreans could continue to use keys, but what need or desire has driven them, and not Americans, to favor retinal scanners?
http://www.irisid.com/
CA Blog: Lousy commercials for lousy cars.
The reading that were assigned from Regina Lee Blaszczyk's "American Consumer Society, 1865-2005" informed readers about the early days of consumerism in America. These chapters are about how despite the young America being highly industrialized and garnering lots of capital, it still being influenced by its European Ancestors. Americans were seen by other developed nations as being "rough and tumble" so affluent Americans would use their resources to try and become as sophisticated as the Europeans. "Although it came from British conventions, the culture of refinement evolved into something distinctly American in the decades surrounding the civil war" (pg. 13) This meaning that it took the influence from Britain's culture and it became uniquely American. The largest part of the reading included that Victorian culture in Britain, is what was seen as the in thing to do. Americans would have to follow this modern wave in order to be considered true cultural aficionados.
A large part of advertisement and consumerism in general, is the populations way of fitting in with the in crowd, as our professor has pointed out. The commercial that i have linked my readers to is what is considered the social norm for our generation. Despite the heavy computer generated images and technicolor high tops the actual concept of making the consumer feel that he/she is not hip, is nothing new.Blaszyck states that Women of all economic backgrounds could afford the corset dress after certain advances had been made. So naturally, all women felt the need to have one so as to keep up with their friends.
Does this seem right? Do certain products make people seem more "hip" to their peers?
http://www.youtube.com/user/KiaMotorsAmerica?v=4zJWA3Vo6TU&feature=pyv&cid=sem&ppc=y
CA Blog: Hollywood Sells the American Dream
Regina Blaszczyk’s American Consumer Society, which examines the history of consumer society in America from the end of the Civil War to modern times, also discusses the role that Hollywood has played in shaping said consumer society. Blaszczyck tells of how “…movies exposed mainstream Americans to the goings on in style centers like New York City and Chicago.” (p. 103) In essence, Americans saw ways of life and lifestyles that they would ordinarily be exposed to in their small towns. For people living in places like Muncie Indiana, terms like Jazz Age, swing music, and flapper girls meant nothing to them until they saw them in films. Theatre houses served not so much as places of escape but more as gateways to other more fantastical worlds. “Movies expanded middle-class horizons by showcasing the lifestyles of the rich and famous, lives of adventure, glamour, and sexual innuendo.” (p. 105) Indeed, over the years movies have popularized many trends by showcasing subcultures such as flapper girls, motorcycle gangs, and artists, among many others.
It would seem however that in recent years, the power of cinema to inspire mass consumption and to popularize products has diminished. Few films in the last few decades have launched fashion trends or introduced words and terminology that have become a part of everyday vernacular. After the debut of A Streetcar Named Desire in 1951 the popularity of plain white t-shirts, such as the one sported by Marlon Brando’s Stanley Kowalski, skyrocketed. As did the demand for Triumph motorcycles after the same actor rode one in The Wild One in 1953. Films acted as advertisements because they “…showed Americans how others lived, exposing consumers to new outlooks and lifestyles.” (p.105) People would emulate screen characters in everyday life, not just for Halloween. Films used to inspire outfits, not it seems they just create costumes.
What are the social event films nowadays? Some might argue that franchises such as Harry Potter or the Pirates of the Caribbean have generated enormous profits from merchandising. But those films are few and far between, and those franchises already existed prominently in popular culture before their film adaptations. Some say that television and the internet have chipped away at Hollywood’s substantial control over popular culture. Television shows like Mad Men have been credited with reviving interest in retro 1960s clothing and hairstyles. But what was the last film to profoundly impact the way everyday Americans dress? My question is, do films still have profound influence on everyday consumer habits? Have they lost their touch, or has their influence simply changed? After all, the two aforementioned franchises have grossed billions of dollars in revenues from merchandise sales.
- Jeff Walsh Section 01
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Welcome to the Blog!
Welcome to our course blog! Please remember to check your syllabus and the blog requirements outlined below to ensure that your participation is adequate and on time.
Overall, the keys to a successful blog are:
1. An interesting topic that asks a question/evokes participation.
2. Significant textual support from the week's readings.
3. Synthesis with current events, trends, culture, etc.
4. Thoughtful Composition (Don't throw it together at the last minute...)
Additionally, please note the following rules/formatting requirements:
Matthew Ferguson