
The Rise of Mass Advertising by Anat Rosenberg
The Rise of Mass Advertising is the first cultural legal history of mass advertising in Britain c. 1840-1914 and its legal shaping; drawing together the history of capitalism, the history of fields of knowledge, and the history of modern disenchantment to present a new account of advertising's significance for modernity.
This book is a cultural legal history of advertising in Britain* Law & Social Inquiry *
The Rise of Mass Advertising is an expansive endeavour—but it is delivered with astute specificity. Besides providing an extensive account of the formative decades of British mass advertising, the book engages and complements works that question sweeping narratives of modern disenchantment ... * Astrid Van den Bossche, King's College London, Business History *
In this wide-ranging study, Anat Rosenberg brilliantly recasts the history of mass advertising by attending to the pivotal role of law in differentiating adverts from news, art, science, and immoral enterprises, which served at once to disparage and legitimate the imaginative appeals and promotional ploys of advertisers. Meticulously researched and richly illustrated, The Rise of Mass Advertising is a treasure trove of images, ideas, and ideals about the subject of consumption. Thinking across cultural fields and scholarly disciplines, Rosenberg compellingly demonstrates how the advertising industry and its legal regulators helped nineteenth-century Britons to negotiate the perils and potentialities of modern economic life. It is an important book that will be read with great profit by historians of capitalism, law, and the human sciences. * Susanna L. Blumenthal, University of Minnesota *
In the nineteenth century advertising was a newly pervasive and multi-faceted form which, along with every kind of argument and amazement, gave rise to defining legal disputes. From quack doctors to dubious lotteries to men in tights - all the wild Victorian world is there, on the posters and in the court cases that Anat Rosenberg's original book takes on, as she tracks the adjudication of advertising's rational and affective modes. An engaging combination of information and surprise—like the best kind of ad. * Rachel Bowlby, author of Back to the Shops: The High Street in History and the Future *
A brilliant work of interdisciplinary humanistic scholarship, one that transforms the historical study of advertising. Rosenberg provides a deep and convincing challenge to perspectives that insist on disenchantment as definitive of modernity. She models a variety of ways to explore how advertisements were received and read. She illuminates much in Victorian legal domains. Meanwhile, it is hard to think of another work that so helpfully illustrates a constitutive understanding of law. Scholars in law and humanities, legal history, British studies, economic history, art history, and medical history, among others, are going to find this an inescapable and necessary and challenging work. * Hendrik A. Hartog, Princeton University *
The onslaught of mass advertising in the nineteenth century established some central features of capitalist modernity with which we still live today. It posed challenges to the popular imagination, to norms of rationality and common sense, to conventional morality, and to sellers, buyers and regulators alike. Anat Rosenberg's artful enquiry shows how Victorian society met these challenges and accommodated them into everyday life. Only this determined interdisciplinary approach - combining law, economics, culture and politics - could help us make sense of the teeming variety of goods and claims that threatened to overwhelm contemporaries, and have overwhelmed many a lesser historian. * Peter Mandler, University of Cambridge *
A richly-researched and originally conceived study, The Rise of Mass Advertising foregrounds the legal realm's disparagement of advertising as a fundamental part of Britain's modern disenchantment. By considering the differences between information and publicity; the uses of public spaces by commercial interests; definitions of puffery and quackery; the evolution of branding, and the rise of professional advertising knowledge, Rosenberg deftly unpacks the relation between economics and aesthetics that lay at the heart of Britain's evolution. She shows that advertising fed the public's desire for magic made in new ways, while simultaneously institutionalizing disenchantment as "modern." Finally, advertising is important not because it embodied changes in capitalism but because it in fact, produced them. * Vanessa R. Schwartz, University of Southern California *
Drawing on an extensive archive of legal and cultural sources, many previously unexamined, this remarkable study provides a novel perspective on the role of law in shaping mass advertising and its place in society. It casts new light on the intricacies of legal presence, the criticisms that attended the expansion of advertising and their formalization through law, and the part law assumed in stabilizing contested boundaries between different fields and interests. Together these insights afford a new perspective on advertising's significance for modernity. Exhaustive, meticulous and post-disciplinary, almost every page is enlivened by a treasure trove of images. * David Sugarman, Lancaster University and Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London *
Well written and researched, the book draws readers into another world where commerce and enchantment meet. * Choice *
Anat Rosenberg's The Rise of Mass Advertising is a multi-dimensional, multi-media exhibition. * Roy Kreitner, Professor of Law, Tel Aviv University, Faculty of Law *
The Rise of Mass Advertising is a landmark history whose influence is likely to be felt for years to come. * James Taylor, Lancaster University, United Kingdom, Journal of Social History *
This historical account is essential reading for all interested in the continuing debates on the role of advertising and its regulation, or those teaching and researching contract and consumer law. * Iain Ramsay, Cambridge Law Journal *
The legal archive that Rosenberg introduces uncovers how ordinary men and women read advertising,...Rosenberg's method thus illuminates the everyday worlds of consumer capitalism. * Erika Rappaport, Law & History Review *
The Rise of Mass Advertising is an expansive endeavour—but it is delivered with astute specificity. Besides providing an extensive account of the formative decades of British mass advertising, the book engages and complements works that question sweeping narratives of modern disenchantment ... * Astrid Van den Bossche, King's College London, Business History *
In this wide-ranging study, Anat Rosenberg brilliantly recasts the history of mass advertising by attending to the pivotal role of law in differentiating adverts from news, art, science, and immoral enterprises, which served at once to disparage and legitimate the imaginative appeals and promotional ploys of advertisers. Meticulously researched and richly illustrated, The Rise of Mass Advertising is a treasure trove of images, ideas, and ideals about the subject of consumption. Thinking across cultural fields and scholarly disciplines, Rosenberg compellingly demonstrates how the advertising industry and its legal regulators helped nineteenth-century Britons to negotiate the perils and potentialities of modern economic life. It is an important book that will be read with great profit by historians of capitalism, law, and the human sciences. * Susanna L. Blumenthal, University of Minnesota *
In the nineteenth century advertising was a newly pervasive and multi-faceted form which, along with every kind of argument and amazement, gave rise to defining legal disputes. From quack doctors to dubious lotteries to men in tights - all the wild Victorian world is there, on the posters and in the court cases that Anat Rosenberg's original book takes on, as she tracks the adjudication of advertising's rational and affective modes. An engaging combination of information and surprise—like the best kind of ad. * Rachel Bowlby, author of Back to the Shops: The High Street in History and the Future *
A brilliant work of interdisciplinary humanistic scholarship, one that transforms the historical study of advertising. Rosenberg provides a deep and convincing challenge to perspectives that insist on disenchantment as definitive of modernity. She models a variety of ways to explore how advertisements were received and read. She illuminates much in Victorian legal domains. Meanwhile, it is hard to think of another work that so helpfully illustrates a constitutive understanding of law. Scholars in law and humanities, legal history, British studies, economic history, art history, and medical history, among others, are going to find this an inescapable and necessary and challenging work. * Hendrik A. Hartog, Princeton University *
The onslaught of mass advertising in the nineteenth century established some central features of capitalist modernity with which we still live today. It posed challenges to the popular imagination, to norms of rationality and common sense, to conventional morality, and to sellers, buyers and regulators alike. Anat Rosenberg's artful enquiry shows how Victorian society met these challenges and accommodated them into everyday life. Only this determined interdisciplinary approach - combining law, economics, culture and politics - could help us make sense of the teeming variety of goods and claims that threatened to overwhelm contemporaries, and have overwhelmed many a lesser historian. * Peter Mandler, University of Cambridge *
A richly-researched and originally conceived study, The Rise of Mass Advertising foregrounds the legal realm's disparagement of advertising as a fundamental part of Britain's modern disenchantment. By considering the differences between information and publicity; the uses of public spaces by commercial interests; definitions of puffery and quackery; the evolution of branding, and the rise of professional advertising knowledge, Rosenberg deftly unpacks the relation between economics and aesthetics that lay at the heart of Britain's evolution. She shows that advertising fed the public's desire for magic made in new ways, while simultaneously institutionalizing disenchantment as "modern." Finally, advertising is important not because it embodied changes in capitalism but because it in fact, produced them. * Vanessa R. Schwartz, University of Southern California *
Drawing on an extensive archive of legal and cultural sources, many previously unexamined, this remarkable study provides a novel perspective on the role of law in shaping mass advertising and its place in society. It casts new light on the intricacies of legal presence, the criticisms that attended the expansion of advertising and their formalization through law, and the part law assumed in stabilizing contested boundaries between different fields and interests. Together these insights afford a new perspective on advertising's significance for modernity. Exhaustive, meticulous and post-disciplinary, almost every page is enlivened by a treasure trove of images. * David Sugarman, Lancaster University and Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London *
Well written and researched, the book draws readers into another world where commerce and enchantment meet. * Choice *
Anat Rosenberg's The Rise of Mass Advertising is a multi-dimensional, multi-media exhibition. * Roy Kreitner, Professor of Law, Tel Aviv University, Faculty of Law *
The Rise of Mass Advertising is a landmark history whose influence is likely to be felt for years to come. * James Taylor, Lancaster University, United Kingdom, Journal of Social History *
This historical account is essential reading for all interested in the continuing debates on the role of advertising and its regulation, or those teaching and researching contract and consumer law. * Iain Ramsay, Cambridge Law Journal *
The legal archive that Rosenberg introduces uncovers how ordinary men and women read advertising,...Rosenberg's method thus illuminates the everyday worlds of consumer capitalism. * Erika Rappaport, Law & History Review *
ANAT ROSENBERG studies the history of capitalism, consumption, and liberalism, through methodologies of law, culture, and the humanities. She is a faculty member at the Harry Radzyner Law School, Reichman University, Israel. While working on this book she was a visitor at the Faculty of History, the University of Cambridge (2017-20) and the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, the University of London (2017-19).
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780192858917 |
| ISBN 10 | 0192858912 |
| Title | The Rise of Mass Advertising |
| Author | Anat Rosenberg |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Hardback |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press |
| Year published | 2022-09-22 |
| Number of pages | 428 |
| Prizes | Winner of Winner, Kleiman Prize, Economic History Association of Israel. |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |