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Mass Communication. Living in a Media World. Ralph Hanson West Virginia University – Morgantown. Slide 1. Chapter 4. Magazines: The Power of Words and Images. Profile: Annie Leibovitz The Development of a National Culture The Magazine Business Magazines and Modern Society.
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Mass Communication Living in a Media World Ralph Hanson West Virginia University – Morgantown Slide 1
Chapter 4 Magazines: The Power of Words and Images Profile: Annie Leibovitz The Development of a National Culture The Magazine Business Magazines and Modern Society ChapterOutline
Profile: Annie Leibovitz • Noted for photography on cover of Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair, and othermagazines • John Lennon • Pregnant Demi Moore: “an enormously positive pushing of the envelope” • “Milk mustache” ads • American Express ads • Collection of women’s portraits
The Development of a National Culture • Magazine – a periodical published at regular intervals that contains articles of lasting interest • Targeted at a specific audience • Derives income from • advertising • subscriptions • newsstand sales • Daniel Defoe – The Review in 1704
The Development of a National Culture • Colonial magazines • American Magazine – Andrew Bradford • The General Magazine – Benjamin Franklin • Saturday Evening Post (1821) • First truly national medium • Circulation of 3 million in 1937 • “it not only reflects, it creates us” – Leon Chipple
The Development of a National Culture • The birth of photojournalism • Invention of halftone in 1880s -- photographs broken down into field of dots • Matthew Brady (1845) credited as inventor of photojournalism • Portraits of noted Americans • Photographic coverage of the Civil War • Idea that photographs are published documents preserving history
The Magazine Business • Post-Civil War growth • Emergence of literate middle class • Growing number of national advertisers • Postal Act of 1879 • Consumer magazines • Popular Science, Good Housekeeping, Vogue • National Geographic, Outdoor Life • Trade magazines • Subscription or controlled circulation • Example: InfoWorld
The Magazine Business • Literary and commentary • Focus on serious essays and short fiction • Harper’s founded in 1850 • Atlantic Monthly (1857)thriving in 21st Century • The Nation (1865) and New Republic (1914) • Crisis (1910) by W. E. B. Du Bois – official voice of NAACP • Muckraking McClure’s was most famous of investigative journals in early 20th Century
The Magazine Business • News magazines • Henry Luce born in China, educated at Yale • Starts Time in 1923 • Adds Fortune with Margaret Bourke-White • Life began in 1936 • Sports Illustrated in 1954
The Magazine Business • Women’s magazines • Godey’s Lady’s Book started in 1830 • The Seven Sisters – service magazines • Good Housekeeping, McCall’s, Redbook, • Ladies Home Journal, Woman’s Day, • Better Homes and Gardens, Family Circle • FBL magazines • Vogue (1892), Harper’s Bazaar • Cosmopolitan
The Magazine Business • Men’s magazines • Esquire (1933) • Fine literature by Hemingway, Fitzgerald • Airbrush pinup art • Playboy (1953) • Photographs of nude women • Lifestyle: the sexually free good life • Maxim (1997) • Meeting the needs of “the inner guy” • “Quick tidbits” rather than fine literature
The Magazine Business • Magazines in the 20th Century • Narrower targets • Larger number of choices • Growing importance of presentation • Shorter articles • Aging readers
Magazines and Modern Society • Magazines and body image • Norm for fashion magazines is a climate that rewards an unattainable thin body shape • Mode magazine folded trying to feature average-sized women • YM magazine adopted policy in 2002 to stop diet articles and start using larger models
Magazines and Modern Society • Who’s in control? Advertising vs. Editorial • Advertorials are advertisements in magazines that are designed to look like editorial content
Magazines and Modern Society • Censorship and teen magazines • Seventeen, Teen, and YM magazines pulled from some NY middle schools in 1998 • Claim was that the health and sex content were inappropriate for children ages 10-14
Magazines and Modern Society • The importance of magazine covers • Determine newsstand sales • Dick Stolley (People magazine) • Young is better than old • Pretty is better than ugly • Rich is better than poor • Music is better than movies • Movies are better than television • Nothing is better than a dead celebrity
Magazines and Modern Society • The importance of magazine covers • Race is a factor in cover photos • 2002 – less than 20% of magazine covers featured people of cover • Halle Berry on cover of Cosmo in Dec 2002 • Covers also have coverlines, teaser headlines used to shock, intrigue, or titillate potential buyers