“Finally, the book we all need to read to understand racial categories in the twenty-first century. Amid the rise of artificial intelligence and new technologies we barely understand, <b>Marcel Rosa-Salas</b> offers a lucid analysis of the structures behind racial thinking—examining the power of marketing and racial capitalism in shaping how we conceive of ourselves and other Americans.”—<b>Arlene Dávila</b>, author of <i>Latinos, Inc.: The Marketing and Making of a People</i><br /><br />“<i>Total Market American</i> complicates scholarship by demonstrating how advertising and marketing not only segment American consumers but also create the “American” consumer based on racial ideologies and practices. <b>Marcel Rosa-Salas</b>’s fieldwork with practitioners in marketing and advertising, yields fascinating insights in terms of branding intersectionality, shopping, and consumer citizenship.”—<b>Sarah Banet-Weiser</b>, author of <i>Empowered: Popular Feminism and Popular Misogyny</i>
1. “The General Market”: On the Commercial Construction of American Whiteness
2. Multicultural Strategy and the Production of Racial Expertise
3. Reaching “Verified Hispanics”: The Racial Science of Digital Advertising
4. The Total Market Turn: US Census Projections and Making the New Mainstream Consumer
Conclusion. Intersectionality, Inc.: Anti-Racism as Consumer Fantasy
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index