A Cultural History of Advertising
69
A peek at the past, present and future implications of our consumer culture
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Betty Friedan Did Not Kill Home Cooking

Betty Friedan Did Not Kill Home Cooking | A Cultural History of Advertising | Scoop.it
Lots of factors contributed to families abandoning from-scratch meals , but feminism isn't one of them.

 

"The mid-century transition from scratch-cooking to using prepared foods had nothing to do with Betty Friedan and everything to do with industrialization. In the years following World War II, corporations began trying to market wartime advances in canned and frozen food technologies to the domestic market. To do so, they aggressively courted housewives with pitches about "quick skillet suppers" of Spam and "ready to serve" Swanson chicken in a can. They sold these foods as more modern, more nutritious, easier, and just plain better than old-fashioned from-scratch cooking. ....

Linda Alexander's curator insight, January 29, 2:36 PM

Michael Pollan and some of the other well-known "foodies" are wrong whenever they assert,  "feminism destroyed family dinner. Feminism made us fat. These attitudes are troubling. And they're flat-out wrong. "  

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Rickroll | Know Your Meme

Rickroll | Know Your Meme | A Cultural History of Advertising | Scoop.it
Rickrolling is a bait and switch: a person provides a web link that he or she claims is relevant to the topic at hand (like this one), but the link actually takes the user to the 1987 Rick Astley music video for “Never Gonna Give You Up.”...
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