{"id":305,"date":"2012-02-03T01:51:17","date_gmt":"2012-02-03T01:51:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/transfer.writingcommons.org\/2012\/02\/03\/analyzing-ads-race\/"},"modified":"2024-04-30T13:20:41","modified_gmt":"2024-04-30T12:20:41","slug":"analyzing-ads-race","status":"publish","type":"article","link":"https:\/\/writingcommons.org\/article\/analyzing-ads-race\/","title":{"rendered":"Analyzing Ads: Race"},"content":{"rendered":"
Typically, the first thing we look for in a photograph is ourselves. Advertisers recognize this fact and use it to their advantage. Because of this, we can learn a lot about a company\u2019s target customer base by observing the people featured in its advertisements.<\/p>\n
The appearance (and, in commercials, the sounds) of the people as well as the setting (location) of an advertisement speaks to both the company\u2019s target audience and its assumptions about that audience. When reading an advertisement in terms of race, it is important to notice which demographics are represented, and which are not, since companies construct ads with a distinct awareness of their target demographic. This may mean that the represented demographic in the advertisement embodies the company\u2019s actual or target customer. However, the presence of an African American woman in an advertisement for a department store may not mean that the store\u2019s target audience is only African American women. Keep in mind that some advertisements do not necessarily depict their target consumer directly; sometimes, they may depict how the consumer might see him- or herself\u2014or alternatively, how he or she might see others. Because racial identification informs the way we interpret advertisements and, likewise, works as an advertising strategy, advertisements can reflect our society\u2019s changing conceptions of and attitudes toward racial constructs.<\/p>\n
For example, take a look (or rather, a listen) at this 1943 Aunt Jemima radio ad:<\/p>\n