‘advertising’s role in disability as a social process’

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‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’ By Mary-Ann O’Donovan Supervisor: Dr. Katrina Lawlor

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‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’. By Mary-Ann O’Donovan Supervisor: Dr. Katrina Lawlor. RESEARCH QUESTION. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

By Mary-Ann O’Donovan

Supervisor: Dr. Katrina Lawlor

Page 2: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

RESEARCH QUESTION

‘An investigation into the social process of disability through mainstream advertising, with an examination of advertising’s body ideal and what this means to the

disabled audience’

Page 3: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

DISABILITY

– Disability as a social process

– Psycho-emotional dimensions of disability (Thomas, 1999; Reeve, 2002)

– Disability as a dramatization tool and metaphor in film/TV (Longmore, 1985; Sutherland, 1997)

– ‘Hyperpresent’ in charity ads (Hevey, 1992)

– Absent from commercial advertising

Page 4: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

ADVERTISING– Advertising one of the most powerful

communication systems in the world (Schroeder, 1999)

– Reflective but only of certain values (Pollay, 1986)

– Audience are active not passive

– Marketing and Non-marketing Uses of Advertising (O’Donohoe, 1993)

– Paucity of disabled people in advertising imagery and also in advertising research

Page 5: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

KEY STUDIES

– Panol & McBride (2001)

– Ganahl & Arbuckle (2001)

– Thomas (2001)

– Hardin et. al. (2001)

– Haller & Ralph (2001)

– Burnett & Pallab (1996)

– Hardin (2003)

Page 6: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

DATA COLLECTION

Semi-structured in-depth InterviewsTwo-stage process

Second stage to clarify and explore issues raised in the first interview

Opportunity for participants to add to what was said in first interview

Page 7: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

ANALYSIS

– Hermeneutic Circle (Thompson, 1997; Quinn-Patton, 2002)

– Parts to Whole

– Interviews in Isolation

– Look for patterns across interviews

Page 8: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

PRELIMINARY FINDINGS

– Experience of Advertising

– Experience of Disability

Page 9: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

Experience of Advertising

– Participants had not connected commercial advertising and disability prior to the research

– Identified advertising’s main goal as selling

– Contrary to Burnett & Pallab (1996) findings

– Advertising not only seen in negative light– Advertising plays various roles for participants

Page 10: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

“As most advertising is targeted at non-disabled people, we can understand why the mobility-

disabled may resent advertising and consequently find it useless” (Burnett & Pallab, 1996: 57)

Page 11: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

– Critical Interpretations (Hirschman & Thompson, 1997)

“….these advertising images of beautiful people, fit people you know that goes against, the majority of the world are

not like that, so I think advertising is a small group of images which really do not reflect the actual real life day-to-day experiences of people…so I think that people would be more inclined to maybe engage in it if they actually saw

themselves in the ads, but I don’t think any individual never mind disabled or non-disabled can actually see

themselves in advertising, because its normally people who are beautiful, or who are considered beautiful, you know,

….” (Female, 30’s)

Page 12: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

– Motivational Interpretations (Hirschman & Thompson, 1997)

“…does it make me feel good watching that? It does and it

doesn’t cause their figures, I’ll probably say, oh yeah I’d love

to lose that weight you know, just looking at them…” (Female, 32)

Page 13: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

– Basis of social interations

– Between family members

– Between friends

– Between members of society

“..cause people talk about ads, you know, did you see this ad, and you know, that interaction between

people, it gets people talking, it gets people thinking, so advertising definitely has a role to play I

think…..” (Male, 20’s)

Page 14: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

– Advertisers don’t consider disabled people to be consumers

“….by including disabled people within the advertising, its acknowledging the fact that they

have a part to play, that they are consumers and as consumers they have to be addressed and if you’re

not obvious in advertising they’re sort of not included as consumers and they’re seen to be poor

or whatever and they are pretty much poor or whatever, but everyone still has some money to

spend on something…” (Female, 42)

Page 15: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

– Hardin et. al (2003)

– Disabled people sensitive to positive integrated images of disability in ads

– Disabled people would like to see advertisers include disability images

– Both supported in the present study

– Describe how they would like to see advertising change

Page 16: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

 

“…I mean disabled people have babies and you have ads on

that and all the mothers are able-bodied, they should have

something like that…a disabled person with their child or

whatever it would, you know, make people more aware that

we can rear a family, do whatever, do everything…”

(Female, 32)

Page 17: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

– Images of disability

– Charity ads viewed negatively

– Impairment-related product ads

“…well of course from a feminist point of view, I was thinking typical they always have bloody women, you

know, there wasn’t a good looking young man in a pair of shorts in a chair, it was women, but fair enough there could’ve been I just didn’t see that brochure, but no I

thought it was great…”

(Female, 30’s)

Page 18: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

Experience of Disability

– More complex than expected

– Social model dominates

– Activists versus Non-Activists

“It is not that these informants are rejecting the social model in favour of the medical model, they are merely downplaying the significance of their impairments as they seek to access a mainstream identity” (Watson,

2002: 525)

Page 19: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

CONCLUSION

– Advertising used in both marketing and non-marketing sense

– Critical and Motivational Interpretations of the Ideal Body

– Relate to Ads on different levels

– Negative Attitudes to Charity Ads

– More Analysis to do……….

Page 20: ‘Advertising’s Role in Disability as a Social Process’

THANK YOU FOR LISTENING!