Judith Williamson Decoding Advertisements Ebook Torrents
Judith Williamson’s ‘Decoding Advertisements’ is a classic look at the semiotics of advertising – about how adverts construct and promolgate meaning, necessarily involving the customer in a system of signs and symbols, as a token in that system. It’s a great book and, in some sense, a forerunner of Naomi Klein’s book on Brands, No Logo I’m going to talk about it because it is exactly not what I am interested in in terms of advertising and psychology. The first advert discussed in the book (shown below, p18 in the book) is an advert for car tyres. The advert shows a car stopped just before the end of a jetty; the text reports how they drove the car 36,000 miles and then did an emergency stop to test the quality of the tyres. They stopped fine – in other words, ‘these are good tyres’. – says Judith Williamson – that is just the overt message of the advert.
The covert message of the advert is captured in the image The outside of the jetty resembles the outside of a tyre and the curve is suggestive of its shape: the whole jetty is one big tyreThe jetty is tough and strong, it withstands water and erosion and does not wear down: because of the visual resemblance we assume that this is true of the tyre as well. In the picture the jetty actually encloses the car, protectively surrounding it with solidity in the middle of dangerous water: similarly, the whole safety of the car and driver is wrapped up in the tyre, which stands up to the elements and supports the car. Thus what seemed to be merely a part of the apparatus for conveying a message about braking speed, turns out to be a message in itself, one that works not on the overt but almost on the unconscious level; and one which involves a connection being made, a correlation between two objects (tyre and jetty) not on a rational basis but by a leap made on the basis of appearance, juxtaposition and connotation.
Is this true? Do the qualities of the jetty occur to us and transfer to the tyres? Driver Hp Pavilion Zv6000 Xperia.
Download eBooks by author Judith Williamson. Guaranteed best prices, direct download! Judith Williamson's 'Decoding Advertisements' is a classic look at the semiotics of advertising - about how adverts construct and promolgate meaning, necessarily. Jan 01, 1978 Decoding Advertisements has 88 ratings and 4 reviews. Windows Storage Server 2008 R2 Essentials Iso Download. By Judith Williamson. Trivia About Decoding Advertis. Leia Decoding Advertisements de Judith Williamson com a Rakuten Kobo. Judith Williamson does not simply criticize advertisements on the grounds of.
Does this happen covertly, on an ‘almost unconscious level’. Does this magic bypass the normal rational monitoring of our thoughts? Well, it could be true, maybe. But also, something like it could be true – maybe the image really plays the role of a phallic symbol and suggest to the viewer thoughts of masculine strength and durability. Or maybe something contradictory but similar in style is true – does the image suggest danger, when the tyres are meant to make you feel safe, so that really it is a bad advert. Or maybe people just like to look at a nice picture of a jetty in the sea. Or maybe they like the curves of the jetty, and this makes them feel positive about the thing they see at the same time (the logo of the tyre manufacturer).