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Brands, which are major economic entities and major symbols of market mediations, are increasingly appearing in the social arena as cultural actors in their own right. Their quest for social legitimacy and to have control over the markets goes beyond the usual framework of their communication with initiatives that have begun to have an impact on the French cultural landscape. Media, digital content, educational kits, museum exhibitions and so on are the actions of an unadvertization, which has the potential to transform not only the rapport brands have with the public but also representations…mehr
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Brands, which are major economic entities and major symbols of market mediations, are increasingly appearing in the social arena as cultural actors in their own right. Their quest for social legitimacy and to have control over the markets goes beyond the usual framework of their communication with initiatives that have begun to have an impact on the French cultural landscape. Media, digital content, educational kits, museum exhibitions and so on are the actions of an unadvertization, which has the potential to transform not only the rapport brands have with the public but also representations of knowledge and culture. The communicative approach at the heart of this book illuminates the contemporary transformations of communication, highlighting three main types of cultural mediations: media, education, and cultural heritage institutions. Cultural Mediations of Brands thus provides a theoretical and critical analysis of the brand and the symbolic effectiveness attributed to it.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Wiley
- Seitenzahl: 266
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Februar 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9781786304575
- ISBN-10: 1786304570
- Artikelnr.: 58411452
- Verlag: Wiley
- Seitenzahl: 266
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Februar 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9781786304575
- ISBN-10: 1786304570
- Artikelnr.: 58411452
Caroline Marti is a Professor in SIC (Information and Communication Sciences) at CELSA, Sorbonne University, France and researcher at GRIPIC (Interdisciplinary Research Group on Information and Communication Processes). She also leads and supervises research in marketing and consumption with an Information and Communication Sciences approach.
Foreword ix
Acknowledgements xiii
Introduction xv
Part 1. Adapting the Media Model 1
Introduction to Part 1 3
Chapter 1. Legitimacy and Foundations of Authority Through Media
Appropriation 5
1.1. Speaking out: power 5
1.2. The porosity of the boundary between advertising and journalism: a
tradition 8
1.3. The media and advertising thought process 13
Chapter 2. The Media Opportunism of Brands and Its Silences 15
2.1. Virtues of inscription-embodiment material and editorial design 15
2.2. Media design 18
2.3. A media ideal, engagement and circulation 19
2.4. The journalist: the guarantor, a contemporary hero of public speech 23
2.5. A social power 25
Chapter 3. A Media of One's Own: Brands and the Struggle for Auctoriality
27
3.1. The rise of native advertising 27
3.2. Engagement and defection in advertising methods 29
3.3. The Internet and the regeneration of a common concept 31
3.4. The auctoriality in question 32
3.5. Auctoriality of brands and journalistic claims 33
Chapter 4. Changes in the Media Landscape and Transfers of Authority 37
4.1. Procedures for exploiting journalists 37
4.2. New categorizations 38
4.3. Pre-eminence of the channel and media changes 41
4.4. Media and reciprocal configurations 46
Conclusion to Part 1 49
Part 2. Asserting Intellectual Authority through Knowledge Mediation 53
Introduction to Part 2 55
Chapter 5. Metaphor of the Consumer-Learner and Branded Ethos:
Representations in the Commercial Environment 59
5.1. From learning to education, a leitmotif of marketing 59
5.2. The manufacture of a brand ethos 64
Chapter 6. Virtues and Modalities of Ordinary Subordination in the
Commercial Environment 69
6.1. Educating the consumer 69
6.2. Modalities of didactic impressiveness: from prescription to solicitude
73
Chapter 7. The Institutionalized Didactic Position: The Masterly Hold 79
7.1. Institutionalization of knowledge mobilized for brands 80
7.2. The "missions" of educational kits 83
Chapter 8. The Temptations of Scientific Mediation 91
8.1. Scientific mediation and expertise: a construction of authorities in
the public space 91
8.2. Figurations and partnership instrumentalization 94
8.3. The missions of the Danone Institute 100
Conclusion to Part 2 107
Part 3. Investing Social Memory Through Cultural Mediation 111
Introduction to Part 3 113
Chapter 9. Cultural Mediation: Regulating the Circulation of Knowledge in
the Public Space 117
9.1. The "cultural being" that has become a communicative object: mediation
through ranking 118
9.2. Cultural mediation: creating interpretations for the public 123
Chapter 10. From Event Management to Patrimonialization 129
10.1. A museum event 130
10.2. Cartier's presence at the Grand Palais: occupying the space, being
admired, being recognized 134
10.3. The challenges of patrimonialization: mediation and authority 139
Chapter 11. The Conditions for Institutionalization 145
11.1. Lack of essentialism of value and categorization 146
11.2. Sustainability 148
11.3. Public configuration 154
Conclusion to Part 3 159
Part 4. Brands: From Mediations to Communicative Matrices of Social
Authority 163 Introduction to Part 4 165
Chapter 12. Brands: Mediation Devices for Symbolic Effectiveness 167
12.1. The conditions of mediation: misappropriation, predilection, and
adjustments 168
12.2. The brand: a mediation system 171
Chapter 13. A Socially Active Symbolic Operativity: From the Factory to the
Matrix of Credibility 179
13.1. Building relational devices 179
13.2. Creating credibility, rhetoric of forgetting and persuasion 183
13.3. The brand: a reproducible semiotic management 186
Chapter 14. The Brand That Has Become a Communication Matrix 193
14.1. The expansion of brand engineering: from unconscious thinking to
organizational maieutics 193
14.2. Social displacements and communicative derivations: branding as a
process of action and play in competition 197
14.3. From management to symbolic management: a generalized extension 201
Conclusion to Part 4 209
Bibliography 211
Index 223
Acknowledgements xiii
Introduction xv
Part 1. Adapting the Media Model 1
Introduction to Part 1 3
Chapter 1. Legitimacy and Foundations of Authority Through Media
Appropriation 5
1.1. Speaking out: power 5
1.2. The porosity of the boundary between advertising and journalism: a
tradition 8
1.3. The media and advertising thought process 13
Chapter 2. The Media Opportunism of Brands and Its Silences 15
2.1. Virtues of inscription-embodiment material and editorial design 15
2.2. Media design 18
2.3. A media ideal, engagement and circulation 19
2.4. The journalist: the guarantor, a contemporary hero of public speech 23
2.5. A social power 25
Chapter 3. A Media of One's Own: Brands and the Struggle for Auctoriality
27
3.1. The rise of native advertising 27
3.2. Engagement and defection in advertising methods 29
3.3. The Internet and the regeneration of a common concept 31
3.4. The auctoriality in question 32
3.5. Auctoriality of brands and journalistic claims 33
Chapter 4. Changes in the Media Landscape and Transfers of Authority 37
4.1. Procedures for exploiting journalists 37
4.2. New categorizations 38
4.3. Pre-eminence of the channel and media changes 41
4.4. Media and reciprocal configurations 46
Conclusion to Part 1 49
Part 2. Asserting Intellectual Authority through Knowledge Mediation 53
Introduction to Part 2 55
Chapter 5. Metaphor of the Consumer-Learner and Branded Ethos:
Representations in the Commercial Environment 59
5.1. From learning to education, a leitmotif of marketing 59
5.2. The manufacture of a brand ethos 64
Chapter 6. Virtues and Modalities of Ordinary Subordination in the
Commercial Environment 69
6.1. Educating the consumer 69
6.2. Modalities of didactic impressiveness: from prescription to solicitude
73
Chapter 7. The Institutionalized Didactic Position: The Masterly Hold 79
7.1. Institutionalization of knowledge mobilized for brands 80
7.2. The "missions" of educational kits 83
Chapter 8. The Temptations of Scientific Mediation 91
8.1. Scientific mediation and expertise: a construction of authorities in
the public space 91
8.2. Figurations and partnership instrumentalization 94
8.3. The missions of the Danone Institute 100
Conclusion to Part 2 107
Part 3. Investing Social Memory Through Cultural Mediation 111
Introduction to Part 3 113
Chapter 9. Cultural Mediation: Regulating the Circulation of Knowledge in
the Public Space 117
9.1. The "cultural being" that has become a communicative object: mediation
through ranking 118
9.2. Cultural mediation: creating interpretations for the public 123
Chapter 10. From Event Management to Patrimonialization 129
10.1. A museum event 130
10.2. Cartier's presence at the Grand Palais: occupying the space, being
admired, being recognized 134
10.3. The challenges of patrimonialization: mediation and authority 139
Chapter 11. The Conditions for Institutionalization 145
11.1. Lack of essentialism of value and categorization 146
11.2. Sustainability 148
11.3. Public configuration 154
Conclusion to Part 3 159
Part 4. Brands: From Mediations to Communicative Matrices of Social
Authority 163 Introduction to Part 4 165
Chapter 12. Brands: Mediation Devices for Symbolic Effectiveness 167
12.1. The conditions of mediation: misappropriation, predilection, and
adjustments 168
12.2. The brand: a mediation system 171
Chapter 13. A Socially Active Symbolic Operativity: From the Factory to the
Matrix of Credibility 179
13.1. Building relational devices 179
13.2. Creating credibility, rhetoric of forgetting and persuasion 183
13.3. The brand: a reproducible semiotic management 186
Chapter 14. The Brand That Has Become a Communication Matrix 193
14.1. The expansion of brand engineering: from unconscious thinking to
organizational maieutics 193
14.2. Social displacements and communicative derivations: branding as a
process of action and play in competition 197
14.3. From management to symbolic management: a generalized extension 201
Conclusion to Part 4 209
Bibliography 211
Index 223
Foreword ix
Acknowledgements xiii
Introduction xv
Part 1. Adapting the Media Model 1
Introduction to Part 1 3
Chapter 1. Legitimacy and Foundations of Authority Through Media
Appropriation 5
1.1. Speaking out: power 5
1.2. The porosity of the boundary between advertising and journalism: a
tradition 8
1.3. The media and advertising thought process 13
Chapter 2. The Media Opportunism of Brands and Its Silences 15
2.1. Virtues of inscription-embodiment material and editorial design 15
2.2. Media design 18
2.3. A media ideal, engagement and circulation 19
2.4. The journalist: the guarantor, a contemporary hero of public speech 23
2.5. A social power 25
Chapter 3. A Media of One's Own: Brands and the Struggle for Auctoriality
27
3.1. The rise of native advertising 27
3.2. Engagement and defection in advertising methods 29
3.3. The Internet and the regeneration of a common concept 31
3.4. The auctoriality in question 32
3.5. Auctoriality of brands and journalistic claims 33
Chapter 4. Changes in the Media Landscape and Transfers of Authority 37
4.1. Procedures for exploiting journalists 37
4.2. New categorizations 38
4.3. Pre-eminence of the channel and media changes 41
4.4. Media and reciprocal configurations 46
Conclusion to Part 1 49
Part 2. Asserting Intellectual Authority through Knowledge Mediation 53
Introduction to Part 2 55
Chapter 5. Metaphor of the Consumer-Learner and Branded Ethos:
Representations in the Commercial Environment 59
5.1. From learning to education, a leitmotif of marketing 59
5.2. The manufacture of a brand ethos 64
Chapter 6. Virtues and Modalities of Ordinary Subordination in the
Commercial Environment 69
6.1. Educating the consumer 69
6.2. Modalities of didactic impressiveness: from prescription to solicitude
73
Chapter 7. The Institutionalized Didactic Position: The Masterly Hold 79
7.1. Institutionalization of knowledge mobilized for brands 80
7.2. The "missions" of educational kits 83
Chapter 8. The Temptations of Scientific Mediation 91
8.1. Scientific mediation and expertise: a construction of authorities in
the public space 91
8.2. Figurations and partnership instrumentalization 94
8.3. The missions of the Danone Institute 100
Conclusion to Part 2 107
Part 3. Investing Social Memory Through Cultural Mediation 111
Introduction to Part 3 113
Chapter 9. Cultural Mediation: Regulating the Circulation of Knowledge in
the Public Space 117
9.1. The "cultural being" that has become a communicative object: mediation
through ranking 118
9.2. Cultural mediation: creating interpretations for the public 123
Chapter 10. From Event Management to Patrimonialization 129
10.1. A museum event 130
10.2. Cartier's presence at the Grand Palais: occupying the space, being
admired, being recognized 134
10.3. The challenges of patrimonialization: mediation and authority 139
Chapter 11. The Conditions for Institutionalization 145
11.1. Lack of essentialism of value and categorization 146
11.2. Sustainability 148
11.3. Public configuration 154
Conclusion to Part 3 159
Part 4. Brands: From Mediations to Communicative Matrices of Social
Authority 163 Introduction to Part 4 165
Chapter 12. Brands: Mediation Devices for Symbolic Effectiveness 167
12.1. The conditions of mediation: misappropriation, predilection, and
adjustments 168
12.2. The brand: a mediation system 171
Chapter 13. A Socially Active Symbolic Operativity: From the Factory to the
Matrix of Credibility 179
13.1. Building relational devices 179
13.2. Creating credibility, rhetoric of forgetting and persuasion 183
13.3. The brand: a reproducible semiotic management 186
Chapter 14. The Brand That Has Become a Communication Matrix 193
14.1. The expansion of brand engineering: from unconscious thinking to
organizational maieutics 193
14.2. Social displacements and communicative derivations: branding as a
process of action and play in competition 197
14.3. From management to symbolic management: a generalized extension 201
Conclusion to Part 4 209
Bibliography 211
Index 223
Acknowledgements xiii
Introduction xv
Part 1. Adapting the Media Model 1
Introduction to Part 1 3
Chapter 1. Legitimacy and Foundations of Authority Through Media
Appropriation 5
1.1. Speaking out: power 5
1.2. The porosity of the boundary between advertising and journalism: a
tradition 8
1.3. The media and advertising thought process 13
Chapter 2. The Media Opportunism of Brands and Its Silences 15
2.1. Virtues of inscription-embodiment material and editorial design 15
2.2. Media design 18
2.3. A media ideal, engagement and circulation 19
2.4. The journalist: the guarantor, a contemporary hero of public speech 23
2.5. A social power 25
Chapter 3. A Media of One's Own: Brands and the Struggle for Auctoriality
27
3.1. The rise of native advertising 27
3.2. Engagement and defection in advertising methods 29
3.3. The Internet and the regeneration of a common concept 31
3.4. The auctoriality in question 32
3.5. Auctoriality of brands and journalistic claims 33
Chapter 4. Changes in the Media Landscape and Transfers of Authority 37
4.1. Procedures for exploiting journalists 37
4.2. New categorizations 38
4.3. Pre-eminence of the channel and media changes 41
4.4. Media and reciprocal configurations 46
Conclusion to Part 1 49
Part 2. Asserting Intellectual Authority through Knowledge Mediation 53
Introduction to Part 2 55
Chapter 5. Metaphor of the Consumer-Learner and Branded Ethos:
Representations in the Commercial Environment 59
5.1. From learning to education, a leitmotif of marketing 59
5.2. The manufacture of a brand ethos 64
Chapter 6. Virtues and Modalities of Ordinary Subordination in the
Commercial Environment 69
6.1. Educating the consumer 69
6.2. Modalities of didactic impressiveness: from prescription to solicitude
73
Chapter 7. The Institutionalized Didactic Position: The Masterly Hold 79
7.1. Institutionalization of knowledge mobilized for brands 80
7.2. The "missions" of educational kits 83
Chapter 8. The Temptations of Scientific Mediation 91
8.1. Scientific mediation and expertise: a construction of authorities in
the public space 91
8.2. Figurations and partnership instrumentalization 94
8.3. The missions of the Danone Institute 100
Conclusion to Part 2 107
Part 3. Investing Social Memory Through Cultural Mediation 111
Introduction to Part 3 113
Chapter 9. Cultural Mediation: Regulating the Circulation of Knowledge in
the Public Space 117
9.1. The "cultural being" that has become a communicative object: mediation
through ranking 118
9.2. Cultural mediation: creating interpretations for the public 123
Chapter 10. From Event Management to Patrimonialization 129
10.1. A museum event 130
10.2. Cartier's presence at the Grand Palais: occupying the space, being
admired, being recognized 134
10.3. The challenges of patrimonialization: mediation and authority 139
Chapter 11. The Conditions for Institutionalization 145
11.1. Lack of essentialism of value and categorization 146
11.2. Sustainability 148
11.3. Public configuration 154
Conclusion to Part 3 159
Part 4. Brands: From Mediations to Communicative Matrices of Social
Authority 163 Introduction to Part 4 165
Chapter 12. Brands: Mediation Devices for Symbolic Effectiveness 167
12.1. The conditions of mediation: misappropriation, predilection, and
adjustments 168
12.2. The brand: a mediation system 171
Chapter 13. A Socially Active Symbolic Operativity: From the Factory to the
Matrix of Credibility 179
13.1. Building relational devices 179
13.2. Creating credibility, rhetoric of forgetting and persuasion 183
13.3. The brand: a reproducible semiotic management 186
Chapter 14. The Brand That Has Become a Communication Matrix 193
14.1. The expansion of brand engineering: from unconscious thinking to
organizational maieutics 193
14.2. Social displacements and communicative derivations: branding as a
process of action and play in competition 197
14.3. From management to symbolic management: a generalized extension 201
Conclusion to Part 4 209
Bibliography 211
Index 223