Commercialising public health during the 1918-1919 Spanish flu pandemic in Britain

L. Hagan
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

This paper aims to use the advertisements of three major brands – Chymol, Formamint and Lifebuoy Soap – to examine how advertisers responded to the 1918–1919 influenza pandemic in Great Britain influenza pandemic. It looks particularly at the ways in which marketing strategies changed and how these strategies were enacted in the lexical and semiotic choices (e.g. language, image, colour, typography, texture, materiality, composition and layout) of advertisements.,A total of 120 advertisements for the three brands were collected from the British Newspaper Archive and analysed using the theory and analytical tools of multimodal critical discourse analysis. The general themes and semiotic structures of the advertisements were identified, with the aim of deconstructing the meaning potentials of verbal and visual resources used to convey ideas about the pandemic, and how they work to shape public understanding of the products and make them appear as effective and credible.,Each brand rapidly changed their marketing strategy in response to the influenza pandemic, using such techniques as testimonials, hyperbole, scaremongering and pseudoscientific claims to persuade consumers that their products offered protection. Whilst these strategies may appear manipulative, they also had the function of fostering reassurance and sympathy amongst the general public in a moment of turmoil, indicating the important role of brands in building consumer trust and promoting a sense of authority in early twentieth-century Britain.,Exploring the way in which advertisers responded to the 1918‐1919 influenza pandemic reminds us of the challenges of distinguishing legitimate and illegitimate medical advice in a fast-moving pandemic and highlights the need to cast a critical eye to the public health information, particularly when it comes from unofficial sources with vested interests.
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1918-1919年西班牙流感大流行期间英国公共卫生商业化
本文旨在利用三个主要品牌的广告- Chymol, Formamint和Lifebuoy肥皂-来研究广告客户如何应对1918-1919年英国流感大流行。它特别关注营销策略的变化方式,以及这些策略如何在广告的词汇和符号学选择(如语言、图像、颜色、排版、纹理、材料、构图和布局)中实施。从英国报纸档案中收集了这三个品牌共120个广告,运用多模态批评话语分析的理论和分析工具进行分析。确定了广告的一般主题和符号学结构,目的是解构用于传达关于大流行病的想法的口头和视觉资源的意义潜力,以及它们如何影响公众对产品的理解,并使它们显得有效和可信。每个品牌都迅速改变了他们的营销策略,以应对流感大流行,使用诸如推荐、夸张、危言耸听和伪科学声明等技术来说服消费者,他们的产品提供保护。虽然这些策略可能看起来是操纵性的,但它们也有在动荡时刻在普通公众中培养安抚和同情的功能,这表明了品牌在建立消费者信任和促进20世纪初英国权威感方面的重要作用。探索广告客户应对1918 - 1919年流感大流行的方式,提醒我们在快速发展的大流行中区分合法和非法医疗建议的挑战,并强调需要对公共卫生信息,特别是来自具有既得利益的非官方来源的信息进行批判性关注。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
33.30%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: Launched in 2009, Journal of Historical Research in Marketing is the only quarterly, peer-reviewed journal publishing high quality, original, academic research that focuses entirely on marketing history and the history of marketing thought. Pedagogical and historiographical / methodological essays are also welcome as long as they are grounded in a marketing and historical context. The essence of an historical perspective is a thorough, systematic, critical awareness of the changes (or continuity) in events over time and of the context in which change or continuity occurs. In addition to regular full length research articles, the Journal occasionally features material under the following sections. Explorations & Insights includes invited commentaries about marketing history and the history of marketing thought. These tend to be shorter (three to six thousand words) than the full articles that run in each issue. Sources of Historical Research in Marketing includes short essays introducing unexplored and novel archives and other primary historical resources, their contents and relevance to marketing history. Archivists or library professionals who believe their collections might be of interest to marketing historians are invited to submit essays to contribute to this section. JHRM also invites historical review essays that focus on historically important marketing books under the section Forgotten Classics. Examples of these historical reviews can be found in past issues of the Journal and those suggest an approach for potential submissions. Authors are advised to check with the editor about the suitability of a book title before submitting a Forgotten Classics review for consideration.
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