Where Truth Lies in Advertising

    Constance de Silva
    Image of study
    TLDR Advertising mixes truth and imagination to persuade consumers that products are essential.
    The document from 5 years ago, "Where Truth Lies in Advertising", explored the complex process of meaning-creation in consumer advertising. The authors found that the effectiveness of advertising relies on a blend of fact and fiction, with an element of reality necessary to build confidence in the target market. The study also highlighted the importance of making advertisements memorable, readable, and socially accessible. The authors identified a strategy called "collateral bundling", where hidden meanings are embedded in thematic information, presuppositions, and implicatures. These hidden meanings, when recognized, create persuasive impressions of the advertised item being essential or urgently needed. The study concluded that this strategy is governed by a principle of semantic interdependency of linguistic, semiotic, and intertextual elements.
    View this study on exchanges.warwick.ac.uk →