Advertising, long a controlling force in industrial society, has
provoked an important body of imaginative work by English language
writers. Michael Ross's Designing Fictions is the first study to
investigate this symbiotic relationship on a broad scale. In view of
the appreciable overlap between literary and promotional writing, Ross
asks whether imaginative fiction has the latitude to critique
advertising as an industry and as a literary form, and finds that
intended critiques, time and again, turn out to be shot through with
ambivalence. The texts considered include a wide range of books by
British, American, and Canadian authors, from H.G. Wells’s
pioneering fictional treatment of mass marketing in Tono-Bungay (1909)
to Joshua Ferris’s depiction of a faltering Chicago agency in Then
We Came to the End (2007). Along the way, among other examples, Ross
discusses George Orwell’s seriocomic study of the stand-off between
poetry and advertising in his 1936 novel Keep the Aspidistra Flying
and Margaret Atwood’s probing of the impact of promotion on
perception in The Edible Woman (1969). The final chapter of the book
considers the popular television series Mad Men, where the tension
between artistic and commercial pressures is especially acute. Written
in a straightforward style for a wide audience of readers, Designing
Fictions argues that the impact of advertising is universal and
discussions of its significance should not be restricted to a narrow
group of specialists.
Les mer
Literature Confronts Advertising
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780773583986
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
ACP - McGill Queen's University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter