The Language of Wellness: Perceived 'Quasi-Health' in Cereal Advertising Language

Date
2020
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Producer
Director
Performer
Choreographer
Costume Designer
Music
Videographer
Lighting Designer
Set Designer
Crew Member
Funder
Rehearsal Director
Concert Coordinator
Moderator
Panelist
Alternative Title
Department
Swarthmore College. Dept. of Linguistics
Type
Original Format
Running Time
File Format
Place of Publication
Date Span
Copyright Date
Award
Language
en
Note
Table of Contents
Terms of Use
Full copyright to this work is retained by the student author. It may only be used for non-commercial, research, and educational purposes. All other uses are restricted.
Rights Holder
Access Restrictions
No restrictions
Terms of Use
Tripod URL
Identifier
Abstract
This thesis explores interactions between food, language, culture, and marketing in order to recognize their convergence in food product advertising. Marketing, a field that blends the studies of psychology, sociology, economics, and business, is not normally associated with linguistics. However, by examining the link between them in isolation, and again through the lens of diet culture, both semantics and pragmatics emerge as essential to the efficacy of the advertising language that signals ‘health’ in a product. To understand how these linguistic advertising tactics affect consumers’ perceptions of a food, I conducted survey research to gather perceived ‘health’ ratings of various cereals solely based on their linguistic ‘health’ cues. The results of this study suggest that there is a relationship between the language used to market cereal and the consumer’s perception. Furthermore, these results implicate the influence of diet culture as an authority in the field of food product marketing.
Description
Subjects
Citation
Collections