Creating Consumers

Creating Consumers

Author: Carolyn M. Goldstein

Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press

Published: 2012-05-28

Total Pages: 425

ISBN-13: 0807872385

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Home economics emerged at the turn of the twentieth century as a movement to train women to be more efficient household managers. At the same moment, American families began to consume many more goods and services than they produced. To guide women in this transition, professional home economists had two major goals: to teach women to assume their new roles as modern consumers and to communicate homemakers' needs to manufacturers and political leaders. Carolyn M. Goldstein charts the development of the profession from its origins as an educational movement to its identity as a source of consumer expertise in the interwar period to its virtual disappearance by the 1970s. Working for both business and government, home economists walked a fine line between educating and representing consumers while they shaped cultural expectations about consumer goods as well as the goods themselves. Goldstein looks beyond 1970s feminist scholarship that dismissed home economics for its emphasis on domesticity to reveal the movement's complexities, including the extent of its public impact and debates about home economists' relationship to the commercial marketplace.


Imagining Consumers

Imagining Consumers

Author: Regina Lee Blaszczyk

Publisher: JHU Press

Published: 2000-01-25

Total Pages: 420

ISBN-13: 9780801861932

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Tells the story of American consumer society from the perspective of mass-market manufacturers and retailers. Case studies illuminate the actions of decision-makers in key firms, including the Homer Laughlin China Company, the Kohler Company and Corning Glass works.


Consumers and Producers

Consumers and Producers

Author: Ellen Mitten

Publisher: Rourke Educational Media

Published: 2011-08

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781617417900

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Young Readers Learn That People Are Both Producers And Consumers.


Raising Consumers

Raising Consumers

Author: Lisa Jacobson

Publisher: Columbia University Press

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 319

ISBN-13: 0231113897

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In the present electronic torrent of MTV and teen flicks, Nintendo and Air Jordan advertisements, consumer culture is an unmistakably important--and controversial--dimension of modern childhood. Historians and social commentators have typically assumed that the child consumer became significant during the postwar television age. But the child consumer was already an important phenomenon in the early twentieth century. The family, traditionally the primary institution of child socialization, began to face an array of new competitors who sought to put their own imprint on children's acculturation to consumer capitalism. Advertisers, children's magazine publishers, public schools, child experts, and children's peer groups alternately collaborated with, and competed against, the family in their quest to define children's identities. At stake in these conflicts and collaborations was no less than the direction of American consumer society--would children's consumer training rein in hedonistic excesses or contribute to the spread of hollow, commercial values? Not simply a new player in the economy, the child consumer became a lightning rod for broader concerns about the sanctity of the family and the authority of the market in modern capitalist culture. Lisa Jacobson reveals how changing conceptions of masculinity and femininity shaped the ways Americans understood the virtues and vices of boy and girl consumers--and why boys in particular emerged as the heroes of the new consumer age. She also analyzes how children's own behavior, peer culture, and emotional investment in goods influenced the dynamics of the new consumer culture. Raising Consumers is a provocative examination of the social, economic, and cultural forces that produced and ultimately legitimized a distinctive children's consumer culture in the early twentieth century.


Consumer Value

Consumer Value

Author: Morris B. Holbrook

Publisher: Psychology Press

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 224

ISBN-13: 9780415191920

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Consumer Value is one of the few books that attempts to define and analyse exactly what consumers want. By setting down a new and innovative framework for the concept of 'value' it is as provocative as it is rigorous.


Consumers' Imperium

Consumers' Imperium

Author: Kristin L. Hoganson

Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press

Published: 2010-03-15

Total Pages: 417

ISBN-13: 0807888885

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Histories of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era tend to characterize the United States as an expansionist nation bent on Americanizing the world without being transformed itself. In Consumers' Imperium, Kristin Hoganson reveals the other half of the story, demonstrating that the years between the Civil War and World War I were marked by heightened consumption of imports and strenuous efforts to appear cosmopolitan. Hoganson finds evidence of international connections in quintessentially domestic places--American households. She shows that well-to-do white women in this era expressed intense interest in other cultures through imported household objects, fashion, cooking, entertaining, armchair travel clubs, and the immigrant gifts movement. From curtains to clothing, from around-the-world parties to arts and crafts of the homelands exhibits, Hoganson presents a new perspective on the United States in the world by shifting attention from exports to imports, from production to consumption, and from men to women. She makes it clear that globalization did not just happen beyond America's shores, as a result of American military might and industrial power, but that it happened at home, thanks to imports, immigrants, geographical knowledge, and consumer preferences. Here is an international history that begins at home.


Consumer Reports

Consumer Reports

Author: Kevin P. Manion

Publisher: Arcadia Publishing

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 132

ISBN-13: 9780738538907

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Consumers Union, the publisher of Consumer Reports, has been an influential and defining force in American society since 1936. The organization's mission has remained essentially unchanged: to work for a fair, just, and safe marketplace for all consumers. The Consumers Union National Testing and Research Center in Yonkers, New York, is the largest nonprofit educational and consumer product testing center in the world. In addition to its testing facility in Yonkers and a state-of-the-art auto test center in Connecticut, the organization maintains advocacy offices in San Francisco, Austin, and Washington, D.C., where staff members work on national campaigns to inform and protect consumers. In addition to its flagship publication, Consumer Reports, Consumers Union also maintains several Web sites, including www.ConsumerReports.org and www.ConsumersUnion.org, and publishes two newsletters--Consumer Reports on Health and Consumer Reports Money Adviser--as well as many special publications.


Who's Buying? Who's Selling?

Who's Buying? Who's Selling?

Author: Jennifer S. Larson

Publisher: Lerner Publications ™

Published: 2017-08-01

Total Pages: 33

ISBN-13: 1541502655

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Have you ever bought a cold drink at a lemonade stand? Or have you baked cookies for a school bake sale? If so, you’re a consumer and a producer! Consumers, producers, buyers, and sellers all provide things other people want and need. How do they work together in the marketplace? Read this book to find out.


Consumers

Consumers

Author: Eric J. Arnould

Publisher: Irwin/McGraw-Hill

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 912

ISBN-13:

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Consumers, 2e presents a global, behavioural, eclectic and multi-disciplinary coverage of consumer behaviour. Reviewers praised Consumers as the most current text in the field in the areas of technology, research, and illustrative examples.


Authenticity

Authenticity

Author: James H. Gilmore

Publisher: Harvard Business Review Press

Published: 2007-10-18

Total Pages: 316

ISBN-13: 1633690571

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Contrived. Disingenuous. Phony. Inauthentic. Do your customers use any of these words to describe what you sell—or how you sell it? If so, welcome to the club. Inundated by fakes and sophisticated counterfeits, people increasingly see the world in terms of real or fake. They would rather buy something real from someone genuine rather than something fake from some phony. When deciding to buy, consumers judge an offering's (and a company's) authenticity as much as—if not more than—price, quality, and availability. In Authenticity, James H. Gilmore and B. Joseph Pine II argue that to trounce rivals companies must grasp, manage, and excel at rendering authenticity. Through examples from a wide array of industries as well as government, nonprofit, education, and religious sectors, the authors show how to manage customers' perception of authenticity by: recognizing how businesses "fake it;" appealing to the five different genres of authenticity; charting how to be "true to self" and what you say you are; and crafting and implementing business strategies for rendering authenticity. The first to explore what authenticity really means for businesses and how companies can approach it both thoughtfully and thoroughly, this book is a must-read for any organization seeking to fulfill consumers' intensifying demand for the real deal.