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University of Iowa Iowa Research Online Theses and Dissertations Spring 2012 Contested images: the politics and poetics of appropriation Michael Alan Glassco University of Iowa Copyright 2012 Michael Alan Glassco This dissertation is available at Iowa Research Online: https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2875 Recommended Citation Glassco, Michael Alan. "Contested images: the politics and poetics of appropriation." PhD (Doctor of Philosophy) thesis, University of Iowa, 2012. https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2875. Follow this and additional works at:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd Part of theMass Communication Commons CONTESTED IMAGES: THE POLITICS AND POETICS OF APPROPRIATION by Michael Glassco An Abstract Of a thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Mass Communications in the Graduate College of The University of Iowa May 2012 Thesis Supervisors: Associate Professor Venise Berry Associate Professor Kembrew McLeod 1 As a tactic of dissent and political protest, appropriation artists use commercial and government images to critique power, by subverting the intended message and displaying their critique in public spaces. Appropriation activists are revolutionary subjects, graphic agitators, and rebellious bricoleurs who engage in the tactics of guerrilla semiotics, ‘subvertising,’ fauxvertising and culture jamming, to expose advertising imagery as a system of ideology that manufactures identity, sublimates desire, and naturalizes the construction of race, class, and gender. Their tactics also indicate the attempt to reclaim public space to address the privatization of culture and the unequal access to cultural resources. The use of images and tactics of appropriation creates a more diverse array of voices in the public sphere and opens spaces for active participatory engagement with the public to address systematic asymmetries of power. The appropriation tactics and images used by Barbara Kruger, Jenny Holzer, and the Guerrilla Girls in the late seventies and eighties, for example, addressed the normalizing representations of gender, sexuality and identity in advertising and the idealized promises of consumption. In the late 1980s and 1990s, the Billboard Liberation Front, Adbsuters, Robbie Conal, and Shepard Fairey engaged in ideological warfare over the right to own, access, produce and display appropriated images. From billboards intended for commercial advertising to the display of ‘subvertisements’ in magazines, and the un-commercials to promote Buy Nothing Day and TV Turn off Week, these activists confront the prevailing cultural apparatuses of meaning and the political economic structures that enable their power. To capture the cynical trendsetting demographic more resistant to traditional advertising, advertisers have co-opted the imagery, style and tactics of these artists. Their tactical strikes and visual style now convey hip, new, edgy and cool brand identities. Their images have also been commodified as commercial products and institutionalized art and have become fashion. As appropriation artists and advertising agencies engage in 2 the same tactics and use the same visual style, the lines between art, appropriation and advertising have blurred and the public sphere overcome with a pastiche of visual codes. The dissertation traces the tactics of appropriation of Barbara Kruger, The Billboard Liberation Front and Shepard Fairey as exemplars of transgression and commodification within the changing commercial conditions of neo-liberalism. Their works, tactics and strategies are emphasized as points of insight into the practices and conditions of subversion as well as the limits of hegemonic containment that reproduces the political and economic structure within which they operated. The dissertation furthers and contributes to the theoretical and methodology of critical cultural studies as it emphasizes the role of the economy and ideology in reproducing the prevailing hegemonic order. Critical cultural studies hinges on the concepts of hegemony as lived discursive and ideological struggles over meaning and communication resources within historically specific and socially structured contexts. This framework emphasizes the poetics of appropriation - the use, meaning and spaces of articulation of visual representations with the politics - the socio-economic and discursive conditions that reproduce the dominant social order. Abstract Approved: ______________________________________________________ Thesis Supervisor ______________________________________________________ Title and Department ______________________________________________________ Date ______________________________________________________ Thesis Supervisor ______________________________________________________ Title and Department ______________________________________________________ Date CONTESTED IMAGES: THE POLITICS AND POETICS OF APPROPRIATION by Michael Glassco A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Mass Communications in the Graduate College of The University of Iowa May 2012 Thesis Supervisors: Associate Professor Venise Berry Associate Professor Kembrew McLeod Graduate College The University of Iowa Iowa City, Iowa CERTIFICATE OF APPROVAL _____________________________ PH.D. THESIS ____________ This is to certify that the Ph. D. thesis of Michael Glassco has been approved by the Examining Committee for the thesis requirement for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Mass Communications at the May 2012 graduation Thesis Committee: ______________________________________________ Venise Berry, Thesis Supervisor _____________________________________________ Kembrew McLeod, Thesis Supervisor _____________________________________________ Gigi Durham _____________________________________________ Tim Havens _____________________________________________ Don McLeese To You! ii The constitution of the resistant subject depends upon the ability to formulate cultural meanings from the materials that are available and can be appropriated from the dominant culture…cultural appropriation operates not only as a means for the development of an alternative subjectivity on an individual level, it also opens up cultural space for the formation of collective identities…The interplay of culture and identity - how culture forms the self and how culture may be subversively utilized for the definition of one’s self-becomes a thoroughly political matter with no predetermined outcome. Instead, the process is an ongoing struggle for identity, which itself is a product of culture or, more accurately, the outcome of a contestation over the meaning of cultural artifacts. Rosemary Coombe, The Cultural Life of Intellectual Property iii TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION………………………...………………………………………………1 Organization of Chapters………………………………………………………...16 CHAPTER ONE THE POLITICS AND POETICS OF APPROPRIATION…..………22 Poetics of Appropriation…………………………………………………………24 Futurism………………………………………………………………….25 Dada…………………………………………………………...…………31 Situationist International…………………………………………………38 Punk…...……………………………………………………....................43 Radical Subjects………………………………………………………….46 Counter Public(s)………………………………………………...............51 Gaining Access…………………………………………………………..53 Politics of Appropriation………………………………………………………....56 Ideological Power………………………………………………………..56 Articulation……………………………………………………………....57 Hegemony………………………………………………………………..58 Incorporation……………………….…………………………………….64 Containment……………………………………………………………...66 Commodification.………………………………………………………...67 Subversive Limits………………………………………………………..69 CHAPTER TWO IDENTITY IN THE FIELD OF VISION……….…………………..71 Jenny Holzer……………………………………………………………………..71 Electronic Revolution……………………………………………………74 Image-Text……………………………………………………………….80 Barbara Kruger…………………………………………………………………...82 You are Not Yourself………………………………………………….....92 Your Body is a Battleground………………………………………….....96 Inciting Questions………………………………………………………104 Guerrilla Girls…………………………………………………………………..108 Rewriting Herstory….…………………………………………………..110 As Recognizable as Coca-Cola…………………………………………………114 It’s a Small World………………………………………………………118 Concluding Comments………………………………………………………….123 CHAPTER THREE MEACONING, INTRUSION, JAMMING, INTERFERENCE...125 Billboard Liberation Front……………………………………………………...125 Jujitsu…...………………………………………………………………133 MIJI……...……………………………………………………………...143 Fauxvertising and FSU-ism…………………………………………….146 iv Culture Jamming………………………………………………………………..152 Adbusters……………………………………………………………….154 Subvertisements……………………………………………………...…158 Kill your TV and Buy Nothing…………………………………………165 Interference……………………………………………………………………..170 Concluding Comments………………………………………………………….178 CHAPTER FOUR UNDERMINING THE ICONOGRAPHY OF POWER…...…….181 Robbie Conal…………………………………………………………………...181 Adversarial Tactics……………………………………………………..190 Shepard Fairey………………………………………………………………….194 Phenomenology and De-familiarization………………………………..202 Dis-obey………………………………………………………………...205 Semiotic Disturbance…..……………………………………………….212 Banksy…………………………………………………………………………..216 Ready-mades and Inter-textuality………………………………………219 Obey™………….………………………………………………………………223 Institutional Giant………………………………………………………228 David the Giant…………………………………………………………233 Concluding Comments………………………………………………………….235 CHAPTER FIVE THE SUBVERSIVE LIMITS OF APPROPRIATION…....……….237 Rise of Neoliberalism…………………………………………………………..237 Media Conglomeration…………………………………………………240 Marketing Revolution and Revolutionary Marketing…………………………..246 From Hunting Cool to Manufacturing Authenticity……….…………...250 Guerrilla Marketing…………………………………………………………….254 Counter Culture Brand..………………………………………………...259 United by Hegemony……………..…………………………………….277 Branded Legitimacy…………………………………………………….284 One and the Same………………………………………………………290 Concluding Comments………………………………………………………….292 CONCLUSION…………………………………………………………………………294 Poetics of Appropriation………………………………………………………..295 Politics of Appropriation….…………………………………………………….301 Future of Appropriation (Research)…………………………………………….315 Appropriation and Co-optation…………………………………………317 Guerrilla Marketing and Intellectual Property………………………….318 Appropriation and Protest: Occupy and the 99%...................................321 END NOTES…..……………………………………………………………………….327 v

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semiotics, 'subvertising,' fauxvertising and culture jamming, to expose As appropriation artists and advertising agencies engage in .. to spread corporate monopoly power and Coca Cola everywhere without constraints.”4.
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