References for CMNS426

 

Alasuutari, P. (1995). Chapter 9: The structures of interaction. In Researching culture: Qualitative method and cultural studies (pp. 101-115). London: Sage. 

 

Banks, M. and Howard, M. (Eds.) (1997). Rethinking visual anthropology. New Heaven: Yale University.

 

Borzekowski, D.L.G. and Robinson, T.N. (2001). The 30-second effect: An experiment revealing the impact of television commercials on food preferences of preschoolers. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 101(1), 42-46.

 

Cochoy, F. (2004). Is the modern consumer a BuridanÕs donky?: Product packaging and consumer choice. In K. M. Ekstršm and H. Brembeck (Eds.) Elusive consumption (pp. 205-227). New York: Oxford University Press.

 

Critser, G. (2002). Chapter 1: Up up up! and Chapter 2: Supersize me. In Fat land: How Americans became the fattest people in the world (pp. 7-29). UK: Penguin Books.

 

Elliott, R. (2004). Chapter 7: Making up people: Consumption as a symbolic vocabulary for the construction of identity. In K. M. Ekstršm and H. Brembeck (Eds.) Elusive consumption (pp. 129-143). New York: Oxford University Press.

 

Gamble, M. and Gotugna, N. (1999). A quarter century of TV food advertising targeted at children. American Journal of Health Behavior, 23 (4), 261-267.

 

Goffman, E. (1979). Gender advertisements. London: Macmillian.

 

Goossens, C. (2003). Chapter 7: Visual persuasion: Mental imagery processing and emotional experiences. In L. M. Scott and R. Batra (Eds.) Persuasive imagery: A consumer response perspective (pp. 129-138). London: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers.

 

Hill, J. M. and Radimer, K.L. (1997). A content analysis of food advertisements in television for Australian children. Australian Journal of Nutrition & Dietetics, 54(4), 174-187.

 

Kamen, J. M. (1981). Triggers of advertising effects: Several types of involvement, especially latent involvement might be useful to advertisers. Journal of Advertising Research, 21(1), 59-63.

 

Kline, S. (2005). Countering childrenÕs sedentary lifestyles: An evaluative study of a media-risk education approach. Childhood, 12(2), 239-258.

 

Kline, S. (September 7, 2005). Exploring a multi-disciplinary approach to overweight and obesity in the United States. Conference Paper prepared for Exploring the Cultural Context of Food, Physical Activity and Physical Inactivity. the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention by the Academy of Educational Development. The United States, Washington DC.   

 

Leiss, W., Kline, S. and Jhally, S. (1986). Chapter 8: Two approaches to the study of advertisements. Chapter 9: The structure of advertisements. In Social communication in advertising: Person, products & images of well-being (pp. 149-236). Toronto: Methuen.   

 

Leiss, W., Kline, S. and Jhally, S. (1990). Chapter 8: Two approaches to the study of advertisements. Chapter 9: The structure of advertisements. In Social communication in advertising: Person, products & images of well-being (pp. 197-284), Second Edition. Scarborough, Ont: Nelson Canada.

 

Madden, T. J., Dillon, W. R. and Twible, J. L. (1983). Construct validity of attitude toward the ad: An assessment of convergent/discriminant dimensions. In L. Percy and G.. W. Arch (Eds.) Advertising and consumer psychology (pp. 74-91). Lexington, MA: Lexington Books.

 

Marshall, M. [1964]. Understanding media: The extensions of man. (Second Edition).  New York: New American Library.

 

McQuarrie, E. F. and Mick, D. G. (2003). Chapter 11: The contribution of semiotic and rhetorical perspectives to the explanation of visual persuasion in advertising. In L. M. Scott and R. Batra (Eds.) Persuasive imagery: A consumer response perspective (pp. 191-221). London: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers.

 

Messaris, P. (1996). Chapter 5: Editing and montage. Chapter 6: Showing the unspoken. In Visual persuasion: The role of images in advertising (pp.163-264). London: Sage.

 

Miles, S. (1998). Chapter 2: Consumerism in context. Chapter 3: Design for life or consumption designed? In Consumerism: As a way of life (pp.15-51). London: Sage.

 

Miller, D. (1998). A theory of shopping. Cambridge: Polity Press.

 

Mintz, J. H., Layne, N., Ladouceur, R. et al. (1997). Chapter 13: Social advertising and tobacco demand reduction in Canada. In M. E. Goldberg, M. Fishbein and S. E. Middlestadt (Eds.) Social marketing: Theoretical and practical perspectives (pp. 217-229). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publisher.

 

Morris, J. D., Woo, C., Geason, J. et al. (2002). The power of affect: Predicting intention. Journal of Advertising Research, May-June, 7-17.

 

Mulvey, M.S. and Medina, C. (2003). Chapter 12: Invoking the rhetorical power of character to create identifications. In L. M. Scott and R. Batra (Eds.) Persuasive imagery: A consumer response perspective (pp. 223-245). London: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers.

 

Murray, S. (1999). Saving our so-called lives: Girl-fandom, adolescent subjectivity, and Òmy so-called lifeÓ. In M. Kinder (Ed.) KidsÕ  media culture, (pp. 221-239). Durham: Duke University Press.

 

Nicholson, D.R. (1997). Chapter 9: The diesel jeans and workwear advertising campaign and the commodification of resistance. In K. T. Frith (Ed.). Undressing the ad: Reading culture in advertising (pp. 175-196). New York: Peter Lang.

 

Nordhielm, C. (2003). Chapter 5: A levels-of-processing model of advertising repetition effects. In L. M. Scott and R. Batra (Eds.) Persuasive imagery: A consumer response perspective (pp. 91-105). London: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers.

 

Pechmann, C. (1997).Chapter 12: Does antismoking advertising combat underage smoking? A review of past practices and research. In M. E. Goldberg, M. Fishbein and S. E. Middlestadt (Eds.) Social marketing: Theoretical and practical perspectives (pp. 189-229). Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publisher.

 

Pink, S. (2001). Doing visual ethnography: Images, media, and representation in research. London: Sage.

 

Prosser, J. (1998). Image-based research: A source book for qualitative researchers. London: Bristol, PA: Falmer Press.

 

Prose. F. (2003). Chapter 2: The wages of Sin. In Gluttony: The seven deadly sins (pp. 43-75). The United States: Oxford University Press & The New York Public Library.  

 

Rose, G. (2001). Visual methodologies: An introduction to the interpretation of visual materials. London: Sage.

 

Schr¿der, K., Drotner, K. Kline, S. et al. (2003). Chapter one: approaching media audiences. Chapter two: The history and divisions of audience research: the received view. Chapter three: Methodological pluralism: the meta-theoretical foundations of discursive realism. In Researching audiences (pp. 3- 63). USA: Oxford University Press.

 

Storey, J. (1999). Chapter 3, Cultural consumption as communication. In Cultural consumption and everyday life (pp.36-60). New York: Oxford University Press.

 

Thompson, C.J. (2004). Chapter 9: Dreams of Eden: A critical reader-response analysis of the mytho-ideologies encoded in natural health advertisements. In K. M. Ekstršm and H. Brembeck (Eds.) Elusive consumption (pp. 175-204). New York: Berg.

 

Warde, A. (1994). Consumers, identity and belonging: Reflections on some theses of Zygmunt Bauman. In R. Keat, N. Whiteley and N. Abercrombie (Eds.) The authority of the consumer (pp. 59-74). London: Routledge.  

 

Warde, A. (2002). Setting the scene: Changing conceptions of consumption. In S. Miles, A. Anderson and K. Meethan (Eds.) The changing consumer: markets and meanings (pp. 10-24). London: Routledge.

 

Wernick, A. (1991). Chapter 2: Advertising as ideology. Chapter 8: The promotional condition of contemporary culture. In Promotional culture: Advertising, ideology and symbolic expression (pp. 21-47, 181-198). London: Sage.

 

Wiggin, A.A. and Miller, C.M. (2003). Chapter 14: ÒUncle Sam wants you!Ó: Exploring verbal-visual juxtapositions in television advertising. In L. M. Scott and R. Batra (Eds.) Persuasive imagery: A consumer response perspective (pp. 267-295). London: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers.

 

Williams, J. (1978). Chapter 2: Signs address somebody. Decoding advertisements: Ideology and meaning in advertising (pp. 40-70). London: Marion Boyars.