Consumer Culture: Annie White, Consumption And Youth Culture

1344 Words3 Pages

The 1980s decade is defined by consumption and youth culture. However, throughout this course our class analyzed consumption and consumer culture narrowly from a white, middle-class American perspective. Hence, this essay highlights the experience of a black, Jamaican-Canadian woman in the consumer culture and advertising era of the 1980s – Annie White.
Annie White was born in 1971 and raised in a rural, poverty-stricken neighborhood in the parish (similar to province) of St. Ann. White was raised in a poor single-parent family where her mother raised 4 children (including her, the eldest). Still, White had full access to television, radio, newspapers, and other forms of media. Regardless, many of her consumer choices and experiences with …show more content…

Upon arriving in Canada in 2001, Annie White recalls the frustration she experienced with advertising not being true to reality. White argues: “In Canada the advertisements are too demanding, too in your face; too much advertising. […] Most of the advertisements are misleading. They are luring, because when you actually go to the place [the store], it is not the actual price they said on TV. They will say in the commercial that the burger is for $5, but it is actually $5.99 plus tax.” (A. White, personal communication, October 15, 2016)
In other words, advertising in Canada is not doing its job, which according to Annie White, is to inform consumers so they can choose products that will help them in their daily lives (which poor people cannot afford). White continues by expressing her love for Jamaican advertising in the 1980s, which were “more informative and kid-friendly” (A. White, personal communication, October 15, 2016). For example, one of her favourite commercials by Quench-Aid (a product comparable to Kool-Aid) taught children step-by-step instructions for how to make their product (a refreshing fruit drink) (A. White, personal communication, October 15, 2016). Advertising in our age would benefit from White’s argument for more honesty and information relevant to the …show more content…

However, the advertisers promoting these value and goods are not organizations, corporations, or governing powers, they are ordinary people. Annie White’s interactions with her Jamaican family living in America dictated the values she associated with American goods. According to White, many of her peers believed that owning any American goods meant an increase in status, because they saw America as a country which represented wealth and success (A. White, personal communication, October 15, 2016). As a result, many people rely on commodities and goods to indicate status. In his article, “Conspicuous Consumption” (1899), Thorstein Veblen suggests that “consumption of higher quality goods denotes his [or her] evidence of wealth. Being able to consume in due quantity and quality becomes an indication of inferiority” (Veblen, 2000, 190). In other words, consuming American goods– to indicate wealth and establish a social hierarchy in which they have the highest prestige over

Open Document