Rise Of The Image Culture Analysis

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Have you ever seen an advertisement for a product and could immediately relate to the subject or the product in that advertisement? Companies that sell products are always trying to find new and interesting ways to get buyers and get people’s attention. It has become a part of our society today to always have products being shown to them. As claimed in Elizabeth Thoman’s essay Rise of the Image Culture: Re-Imagining the American Dream, “…advertising offered instructions on how to dress, how to behave, how to appear to others in order to gain approval and avoid rejection”. This statement is true because most of the time buyers are persuaded by ads for certain products. I have chosen two advertisements that look different, but are selling the same products. The brands have different perspectives and different audiences. One is a Durango boot advertisement and the other is an advertisement for Ariat’s line. The Durango ad is a picture of two people, a man and a woman, on red rocks like the ones in Arizona and New Mexico. The male figure is in a bent knee, crouched position, wearing sunglasses, a cowboy hat, a brown leather vest, a white tank top and blue jeans with brown boots. The female figure is laying in front of the male figure, …show more content…

Their advertisement is of a rodeo bronco rider being thrown off the bronco, all the viewer can see of the rider is his back side and you can barely see his face. The rider is wearing what looks like a white long-sleeve shirt with a black protective vest, a pair of blue jeans and chaps, as well as boots and a cowboy hat, somewhat similar to the Durango boot ad. At the bottom corner of the advertisement is Ariat’s symbol and to the left of that in white western style font, “There’s nothing a few bone screws can’t fix”. I think this is telling viewers that if they put these boots on they can do anything and only end with minor repercussions that can be easily

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