Friday, 2 May 2014

Context of Practise 2: 3,000 Word Consumerism Essay

How does consumerism manipulate our instinctual desires to create false needs?

‘If you’re like most people, you think that advertising has no influence on you. This is what advertisers want you to believe.’
(Kilbourne, 2000, p33)

As stated by Kilbourne, the intention of advertising is to influence the customers desire to buy something believing that it will improve their quality of life. This essay will respond to how psychology and advertising have merged to produce a consumerist society and how this has influenced advertising and design today.

Advertising plays on the idea that we need something to make us happy based on the theories of Sigmund Freud. Freud believed that humans had hidden primitive instincts and by repressing these desires, it can lead to chaos in our society. In chapter 2 of the book, ‘Civilizations and Its Discontent’, Freud discussed the theory of The Pleasure Principle. This is the idea that ‘Life, as we find it, is to hard for us; it brings us too many pains, disappointments and impossible measures’ (Freud, 2004, p14) creating a tension between civilization and the individual as humans will always be dissatisfied. To achieve ‘what we call happiness, in the strictest sense of the word, arises from the fairly sudden satisfaction of pent-up’ (Freud, 2004, p16). Due to the way that raw human desire is incompatible with social convention, humans cannot realize these needs therefore ‘men are accustomed to moderate their claims of happiness- just as the pleasure principle itself, indeed, under the influence of the external world, changed into a modest reality principle’ (Freud, 2004, p17).  This means that society dictates the way that these needs can be somewhat fulfilled. He concluded that our actions are based on our instinctual desires and, if they are fulfilled in a socially acceptable way then we will be contented.

Freud’s theory was applied to advertising by Edward Bernays, who ‘used his uncle’s ideas in a commercial realm to predict, then adjust, the way people believed and behaved’ (Tye, 2002, pviii) as he was ‘convinced that understanding the instinct and symbols that motivate an individual could help him shape the behavior of the masses’ (Tye, 2002, p9). The key to Bernays success was that, through Freud’s theories, he understood his audience because as a society ‘we accept a standardized code of social conduct to which we conform most of the time’ (Bernays, 2005, p39) and the way that society is structured is the way that we approach purchasing. Bernays established techniques used in advertising such as how people usually follow a trusted leader, which introduced celebrity promotion to advertising as well as targeting people, directly by using emphasis and immediacy within the persuasion of adverts. He achieved this in the cigarette industry where he changed public perspective on women smokers by dreaming up the ‘Torches of Freedom’ campaign as it was believed that ‘ the emancipation of women has suppressed many of the feminine desires. More women do the same work that men do. Feminine traits are masked. Cigarettes, which are equated with men, become torches of freedom’ (Dr. A. A.Brill in Tye, 2002, p28). The campaign itself involved women of all walks of life smoking outside in public under the rouse that it was to combat prejudice, which made it a success- it wasn’t realized at the time that he was selling the product, using the event to ‘rob consumers of their own free will, helping the clients predict, then manipulate, the very way their customers thought and acted’ (Tye, 2002, p97).

From Freud’s theories and Bernays’ application, advertising has developed by using this concept to target aspects of modern life. In chapter 7 of ‘The Hidden Persuaders’, Vance Packard identifies eight desires that are hidden within modern marketing. These features are; selling emotional security, when the consumer feels a sense of safety and reassurance from having possession of the product; selling reassurance of worth, giving the user a ‘feeling of being important and gives him more bearing when he goes out into the world’ (Dr. Smith in Packard, 2007, p88); selling ego-gratification, the belief that you are better than other people by having the product as ‘being envied is a solitary form of reassurance’ (Berger, 1972, p133); selling creative outlets, encouraging the customer to add their own personal touch to the product; selling love objects, convincing the consumer that buying the product will attract an object of desire; selling sense of power, believing the product will increase your status in life; selling a sense of roots, appealing to family memories and home comforts as ‘publicity is, in essence, nostalgic. It has to sell the past to the future’ (Berger, 1972, p139); selling immortality, the need to be remembered and have influence during life and after death. By fulfilling these needs, this creates the illusion of happiness through consumption, which is a concept which Freud, Bernays and Packard all have in common.

These ideals are embodied in the Honda Civic -4-Door advert (Fig.1), depicting the inside of a man’s wallet with two images on either side of the wallet; one showing a wholesome image of children and the other showing the car in question. The placement of the car and children indicates the idea of emotional security by being able to drive the children places yourself in your own car. The connection between the car and the children indicates a reassurance of worth as his love for his children makes them worthy of being driven around in a new car. The tagline at the bottom of the advert reads ‘If anybody should ask, go ahead and show them your new pride and joy’. This boosts the ego-gratification of the purchase that by showing it off, you will be the envy of others and how proud you will be by having this car in your life. This advert doesn’t appeal to the selling of creative outlets as it doesn’t encourage the owner to put their own personal touch to the product but it does give the message that the car will become personal and integrate itself within the owner’s life. The idea of selling a love object is indirect within this advert but still remains as the image of the children indicates that this person has managed to find the love of their life and have a family while having this car, also tying in to the selling of power and the improvement of the owners status. The selling of roots is embodied within the advert with the presentation of the car as an amateur home photograph within someone’s wallet makes it seem as though it is part of the family. Through this aspect can the idea of immortality be sold as the car is depicted as an extension of the father figure as the car will be part of the children’s memory of their father during their child-hood.

This emotional approach to marketing by advertisers has change the way that people approach purchasing as it plays on the need to want something instead of buying something as a replacement. This change of the way society views itself has altered the way adverts target consumers as they manufacture desire, creating a false need.

A key aspect of modern consumerism is desire for admiration as public advertisements feed upon the dreams of the consumer, giving them a lifestyle to strive for. The advert makes the audience dissatisfied with their way of life. Advertising proposes how the product can create small changes to your life, enriching it and bringing you closer to the dream and offering an alternative to reality. By offering this image to the buyer, they imagine how others will perceive them, with Berger stating that ‘it’s promise is not of pleasure, but of happiness: happiness as judged from the outside by others. The happiness of others is being envied is glamour’ (Berger, 1972, p132). Publicity is based upon the selfishness of wanting people to envy you and by being valued in this way makes us happy so by buying the product, it justifies the ability to love yourself. Having other people envy you holds the impression of being powerful and having control over others. This creates an adverse effect on our society as this creates an anxiety as to the need of purchases, as by ‘having nothing, you will be nothing’ (Berger, 1972, p143) so to fit in with the rest of the world, we need to keep buying. This anxiety of acceptance goes towards the portrayal of women and the desire to look like a socially prescribed ideal due to advertisements has become part of this culture of admiration. Women are described as ‘more narciassistic’ (Freud, in Coward, 2000, p36) in regards to the physical presentation and this is reflected in how the key to getting further in life is pinpointed on how ‘visual impressions have been elevated to the position of holding the key to our psychic well-being, our social success, and indeed to whether or not we will be loved’ (Coward, 2000, p34). A lot of important things in life are based on how you look so this desire is then targeted in marketing, which links with the main points made by Packard and Bernays.

The desire for admiration is shown in the advertisement for SHARP’s Aquos TV series (Fig 2). The advert shows a well-known public figure stood open-mouthed in shock at a wide-screen television. The television itself is stood on a plinth, making the television taller than the celebrity, and appearing as though it is trying to intimidate with its size, making a display of its power status. The rest of the advert is displayed in white whilst the television screen is swathed in colour drawing the eye of the consumer to the screen as it is trying to show how it is better than any other on the market. This display of dominance is reflected in the use of celebrity as it gives the impression to the audience that this is a television that is good enough for the rich and famous so it can make them just as good. The reaction displayed by the celebrity makes the buyer want to purchase it, as they want other people to react in this way. Berger points out that ‘publicity does not manufacture the dream. All that it does is to propose to each one of us that we are not enviable- yet could be’ (Berger, 1972, p149) and from the advert, being the cause of others jealously from purchasing the product making the owner feel powerful because they can afford a television like this so it becomes a symbol for their status in society.

The socially prescribed ideal of women is used to manipulate the sexual desire of humans but it can be used as a symbol for being more than just the physical. It has become the norm for women in adverts being depicted as objects of desire for men to sell products to the audience. It is believed by consumers that by buying this product, we can attract the person of our dreams. Not only are we consuming products to attract an object of desire but we are purchasing to show that we are desirable because we can afford to buy them. On the other hand, this presentation of women in advertising can create ‘an emphasis for girls and women is always on being desirable, not on experiencing desire’ (Kilbourne, 2000, p148) thereby causing a belief that women should realistically look like this and be the object of sexual gratification within the media, giving the wrong impression to male consumers. This is seconded by Freud who states that ‘’Beauty’ and ‘attractiveness are originally properties of the sexual object’ (Freud, 2004, p25).

This approach to sexual desire can be found in a lot of modern advertising. The Silk Cut cigarettes advertisements by Saatchi & Saatchi for Gallaher offer a range of adverts revolved around depicting visual interpretations of the brand name ‘silk cut’. This particular advert (Fig.3) shows a length of purple silk material with a small diagonal cut made into the material clearly connoting to female genitalia. Even though there isn’t a female within the advert, there is clear influence of Freudian theory as it taps into the subconscious of desire through the sexual imagery and sadistic impulses to harm but also the desire of self-destructiveness to buying objects that cause self-harm. The silk is very soft and feminine like the skin of a female and the use of the colour purple is royal and glamorous. The display and layout of the information would create the subconscious implication of sexual desire in a voyeuristic manner, creating a positive link between the buyer and the brand. Another example of overt sexualisation within advertising is the Dolce and Gabbana advertisement for Esquire magazine (Fig 4), which depicts a group of males watching and surrounding a lone female who is pinned to the floor in a sexual position by another male. The male’s physically overpowering stance over the female emphasizes the explicit desire for power and control and this is mirrored by the women’s gaze looking away from the man adding to the fantasy as ‘In this society, looking has become a crucial aspect of sexual relations not because of any natural impulse, but because it is one of the ways in which domination and subordination are expressed’ (Coward, 2000, p34). This gives the impression to the consumer that by buying the product, you are one step closer to achieving and living out your fantasy.

With both of these adverts looking at sexual desire, Coward, Packard and Kilbourne all comment on the perception of women and sexual desire within advertising. Erving Goffman points out in Kilbourne that ‘we learn a great deal about the disparate power of males and females simply through the body language and poses of advertising. Women, especially young women, are generally subservient to men in ads, through both size and position’ (Goffman in Kilbourne, 2000, p141) highlighting the use of proposed imagery to make the need for sex heightened whilst making women seem weak and feeble against men. In Packard’s The Hidden Persuaders, a psychologist argues that women themselves would like to fulfill the desire of being semi-naked with a large audience watching as it ‘represents a beautiful example of wishful fulfillment’. He argues that women are empowered by being portrayed as a sexual desire for consumerism as the want ‘is present in most of us’ (Uncredited in Packard, 2007, p96). Despite this, Coward points out that ‘beauty, like truth, is one of those empty terms, filled by the values of a particular society at a given historical moment’ (Coward, 2000, p35) highlighting how the sexual desires of society are dictated by what is classed as beauty within advertising circles. The women they choose whose image accompanies the product becomes a desire object and an object of sexual desire, and ultimately selling the product. This brings in the argument of the ethics of using sexual gratification within consumerism to promote and sell more products. What all of these comments do show is how advertising comments on the culture and society at the time, highlighting the society of vanity we have become where we have lost the ability to be happy from what we have naturally and need to enhance what we have to please.

What advertising has ‘achieved by imposing a false standard of what is and what is not desirable’ (Berger, 1972, p154) through the use of psychoanalysis is not just selling a product but it has managed to ‘sell whole new ways of behaving’ (Tye, 2002, p52) by ‘by studying our subconscious needs, yearnings, and cravings’ (Packard, (2007) p86) through the use of systematically targeting the ultimate need of everyday people as it sells ‘a great deal more than products. It sells values, images and concepts of love’ (Kilbourne, 2000, p74). Through a magnitude of other desires, it target the basic human emotion of wanting to be loved because if we do not buy these products, ‘unless we measure up, we will not be loved’ (Coward, 2000, p38) and that is that fear which scares us into buying the most, therefore creating a ‘redefinition of needs’ (Marcuse , 1991, p245). Freud, Bernays and Berger all have this in common as they comment on the need to be loved and its connection to our instinctual wants.  Bernays gives an example of how people desire objects ‘because he has unconsciously come to see it as a symbol of something else’ (Bernays, 2005, p75) and one of the reasons for the purchase as ‘ a means of pleasing his wife’ (Bernays, 2005, p75) highlighting the desire for a product through the acceptance and love for another. Berger takes the ideal and turns it on its head by commenting on how the consumer ‘is transformed by the product into an object of envy for others, an envy which will then justify her loving herself’ (Berger, 1972, p134) highlighting how the need to be loved doesn’t just stem from the need to be loved by others but the need to love ourselves. However, philosopher Jean Baudrillard contradicts this, arguing that ‘there are no given, essential or real needs for humans and that the distinction between ‘true’ and ‘false’ need is impossible to sustain’ (Baudrillard, in Lury, 2003, p68) thereby stating how humans have neither true or false desires so there cannot be any direct correlation between advertising and purchasing. However, Freud argues against this stating that ‘the way that life places love at the center of everything and expects all satisfaction to come from loving and being loved’  (Freud, 2004, p24) highlighting how desire to be loved exists, is what we work for and work towards fulfilling. Overall, the social message of our culture is ‘if you are able to buy this product you will be loveable. If you cannot buy it, you will be less loveable’ (Berger, 1972, p144) therefore we use products as to ‘constitute a guarantee of emotional support’ (Lane Benson, 2004, p159). 

Due to the cycle of consuming for happiness, we are becoming disillusioned, as fantasies do not become a reality. I believe that ‘no other kind of hope or satisfaction or pleasure can any longer be envisaged within the culture of capitalism’ (Berger, 1972, p153). This emotional connection has spurred a generation of consumers who feel the need to feed their self-worth through purchases. This has produced a culture, which now sees the want to buy as normality rather than purchasing for necessity. Bernays stated in his book, Propaganda that ‘We are governed, our minds are molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of…It is they who pull the wires which control the public mind, who harness old social forces and contrive new ways to bind and guide the world’ (Bernays, 2005, p17) This manipulation has changed our way of life as we have become a world of compulsive buyers who have materialistic values, generating ‘negative consequences to building a sense of self that is externally manifest, because the inner core self is likely to feel more and more empty and vulnerable as this process continues over a lifetime.’ (Lane Benson, 2004, p95). By becoming this, the future looks bleak so consumerism is a concept that ‘we must try at last to understand, if we want to change the world that Edward Bernays, among others, made for us’ (Crispin Miller in Bernays, 2005 , p30) and that ‘genuine freedom and well-being depend on liberation from the entire system of one-dimensional needs and satisfactions’ (Marcuse, 1991, pxxxi).

Word Count: 3267

Bibliography:
  1. Berger, J. (1972) ‘Ways Of Seeing’ 1st ed., London: British Broadcasting Corporation- p 132, 133, 134, 139, 143, 144, 149, 153, 154
  2. Bernays, E. (2005) “Propaganda” 2nd ed., New York: Ig Publishing- p17, 30, 39, 75
  3. Coward, R. ‘The Look’, in Thomas, J. (ed) (2000), ‘Reading Images’, Basingstoke: Palgrave- p 34, 35, 36, 38
  4.  Freud, S. (2004) ‘Civilization And Its Discontents’, 2nd ed., London: Penguin Books - p14, 16, 17, 24
  5. Kilbourne, J (2000) ‘Can’t Buy My Love’ 1st ed., New York: Touchstone- p33, 74, 141, 148
  6. Lane Benson, A. (2004) “I Shop Therefore I Am”, 2nd ed., USA: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.- p95, 159
  7.  Lury, C. (2003) “Consumer Culture” 2nd, ed., Oxford: Blackwell Publishers Ltd- p68 
  8. Marcuse, H. (1991) “ One- Dimensional Man”, 2nd ed., London: Routledge- pxxxi, 245 
  9. Packard, V. (2007) ‘The Hidden Persuaders’ 2nd ed., New York: Ig Publishing- p86- 94, 96
  10. Tye, L. (2002) ‘The Father Of Spin’, 2nd ed., New York: Holt Paperbacks- p viii, 9, 52, 97 
Images:

Fig. 1: Honda Civic-4-Door Advert
Kilbourne, J (2000) ‘Can’t Buy My Love’ 1st ed., New York: Touchstone- p33


Fig. 2: SHARP’s ‘Aquos TV series’ Advertisement
James Webby (2010) ‘Evaluation of 2 adverts” [Weblog] 28th September Available from http://jameswebbymediastudies.blogspot.co.uk/2010/09/evaluation-of-two-adverts.html (Accessed 4th January 2014)

Fig 3: Silk Cut Cigarettes Advertisements (1983) by Saatchi & Saatchi
McIntosh, A. (2000) ‘Gallagher Silk Cut Cigarettes Adverts” [Internet] Available from http://www.alastairmcintosh.com/images/silkcut.htm (Accessed 4th January 2014)


Fig 4: Dolce & Gabbana Advert for Esquire Magazine


Green, D. (2013) ‘15 Recent Ads that Glorify Sexual Violence Against Women” [Internet] Available from http://www.businessinsider.com/sex-violence-against-women-ads-2013-5#wrong-dolce-and-gabbana-consistently-tries-to-market-itself-as-an-edgy-brand-this-ad-ran-in-esquire-the-company-retracted-it-after-people-complained-that-it-glamorized-gang-rape-2 (Accessed 4th January 2014)

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