Abstract
The prevailing wisdom in many US marketing circles is that Whites do not comprise a discrete consumer segment. However, just because Whiteness is not explicitly named in marketing discourse does not mean that advertisers have never targeted a White market. Over the course of the twentieth century, Whiteness has been rendered synonymous with the marketing industry’s unmarked category for the average American consumer. First known in industry terminology as the “mass market” but currently termed the “general market,” the historical development of these concepts is inextricably tied to the long-standing practice of racial segregation in the USA. This chapter offers a historical survey and analysis of the racialized invention of the mass market in American marketing discourse and argues that by centering Whiteness and separating people of color as distinct from the mass, American market research and segmentation practices serve as key sites of knowledge production through which the politics of racial segregation are both mirrored and maintained.
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Further Reading
Chang, J. (2014). Who we be: A cultural history of race in post-civil rights America. New York: Picador.
Dávila, A. (2012). Latinos Inc.: The marketing and making of a people. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Flower, I., & Rosa-Salas, M. (2017). Say my name: Nameplate jewelry and the politics of taste. QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking, 4(3), 109–126.
Roth, L. (2009). Looking for Shirley, the ultimate norm. Canadian Journal of Communication, 34(1), 111–136.
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Rosa-Salas, M. (2019). Making the Mass White: How Racial Segregation Shaped Consumer Segmentation. In: Johnson, G., Thomas, K., Harrison, A., Grier, S. (eds) Race in the Marketplace. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-11711-5_2
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