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Search Results for nike
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Journal Article
Public Culture (1999) 11 (3): 499–526.
Published: 01 September 1999
...). Virilio , Paul . 1994 . The vision machine . London: BFI. Weiner , Annette . 1995 . Culture and our discontents. American Anthropologist 97 : 14 -40. Willigan , Geraldine E. 1992 . High performance marketing: An interview with Nike's Phil Knight. Harvard Business Review July...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2010) 22 (2): 309–331.
Published: 01 May 2010
.... Before an encounter with content, there is the encounter with surface. As the Nike, Inc. advertising campaign “Chamber of Fear” reveals, that encounter serves a vital purpose in the relationship between publicity and visual communication. Copyright 2010 by Duke University Press 2010 I thank...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2010) 22 (2): 217–222.
Published: 01 May 2010
... accessible through a variety of hand-held personal information/
entertainment devices. Against the grain, Ommen focuses on the posterized world
of unmoving images brought to us by the arts and institutions of graphic design.
His essay analyzes Nike’s “Chamber of Fear” advertising campaign, launched...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2000) 12 (2): 575–576.
Published: 01 May 2000
... the Nike
swoosh, the U.S. flag, the eagle, Marilyn Monroe, and Malcolm’s X.
Madonna also makes frequent appearances on the streets of Dakar.
David G. Nicholls teaches
at Bilkent University in
Turkey and is the author of
the forthcoming Conjuring the
Folk: Forms of Modernity in
African...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2015) 27 (3 (77)): 409–418.
Published: 01 September 2015
..., digital media, consumer engagement, virtual marketing, and other vanguard modalities of strategic communications. In the most anticipated speech of the 2013 event, Dan Wieden, the creative force behind Nike’s “Just Do It” campaign and cofounder of Wieden+Kennedy (W+K), addressed the attendees with his...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2002) 14 (3): 477–492.
Published: 01 September 2002
... Vietnamese sporting
Nike® gear, only a party member would dis-
play such emblems as these. Air and Space
hardly needs to sell American flags to tourists...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2010) 22 (2): 333–368.
Published: 01 May 2010
... shortage, aerated drinks
are freely available.”3 The photograph became a “problem” only after Plachi-
3. Haksar’s Coca-Cola and Nike photographs will be published in a book titled Brand Ironies, in
which his photographs “relate advertising pieces to ground reality,” as he argued after the Coca...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2001) 13 (2): 337–348.
Published: 01 May 2001
... •
and Consumer Society Michael Storper • Freeway to Marking Time with Nike: The Illusion of the Durable Celia
China (Version 2, for Liverpool) Allan Sekula • Capitalism Lury • Race, Nationality, Mobility: A History of the Pass-
and Autochthony: The Seesaw of Mobility...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2001) 13 (1): 23–38.
Published: 01 January 2001
....
24
PC 13.1-03 Ganahl 2/5/01 10:01 AM Page 25
that the corporate world has been registering (“trademarking”) more and more Language,
sentences taken from common speech—for example, Nike’s “Just do it,” Apple’s Commodification,
“Think different...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2009) 21 (3): 599–618.
Published: 01 September 2009
... of
aesthetics — that for most of us, mass-produced commodities are the very stuff of
our lifeworlds, that they constitute our everyday environments. Shaviro writes,
The aim of brands like Nike, Disney, Apple, Microsoft, and Sony is to
market...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2010) 22 (2): 369–397.
Published: 01 May 2010
..., buildings themselves are designed to shift
effortlessly between structure and screen. The CCTV tower has already doubled
as a substrate for video images, as on June 12, 2008, a series of Nike-produced
short films were projected on the walls of the building in anticipation of the Olym-
pic Games...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2015) 27 (1 (75)): 137–160.
Published: 01 January 2015
... Most Popular Instagram Accounts, September 10, 2013 Category Examples of Instagram Users Percentage of Sample Celebrity—musician Justin Bieber, Beyoncé 34 Celebrity—actor Zooey Deschanel, Channing Tatum 15 Brands Nike, Starbucks 13 Celebrity—reality TV Kim Kardashian, Snooki...
FIGURES
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Journal Article
Public Culture (1994) 7 (1): 289–312.
Published: 01 January 1994
... culture reflects how corporations target African Americans as prime mar-
kets for their products. The Nike/Michael Jordan advertisements are probably
the most popular, with the Gatorade slogan “I want to be like Mike,” adding to
the increased awareness that links stylish commodity consumption...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1998) 10 (3): 577–607.
Published: 01 September 1998
... document (hence the term
“undocumented To address the potential for unauthorized immigration to south
Florida, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS hereafter)4 opened the
Krome Avenue Detention Center on a former Nike missile site twenty miles from
downtown Miami, on the edges...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2007) 19 (1): 117–150.
Published: 01 January 2007
... corporations.
My buying Nike running shoes may say something about how I want to be or
appear, the kind of empowered agent who can take “Just do it!” as my motto. In
doing this, I identify myself with those heroes of sport and the great leagues they
play in, and I join millions of others in expressing...