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February 26, 2007
Youth and Consumerism Bibliography
This is a bibliography that was produced by PhD student Shanly Dixon for a reading course we did on youth and consumption.
Youth and Consumerism Bibliography
Acuff, D. S. (1997). What kids buy and why: The psychology of marketing to kids. New York: Free Press.
Austin, M. J., & Reed, M. L. (1999). Targeting children online: Internet advertising ethics issues. Journal of Consumer Marketing, 16, 590-602.
Buckingham, D. (2000). After the death of childhood: Growing up in the age of electronic media. Cambridge, MA: Polity Press.
Center for Media Education. (1996) Web of deception: Threats to children from online marketing. Washington, D.C.: Center for Media Education.
Chung, Grace and Sara Grimes. (2005). Data mining the kids: Surveillance and market research strategies in children’s online games. Canadian Journal of Communication 30.4.
Cook, D. (2005) The dichotomous child in and of commercial culture. Childhood, 12(2), 155-159 .
Cross, G. (2004). The cute and the cool: The wondrous innocence and modern American children’s culture. New York: Oxford University Press.
Dale, Stephen. (2005). Candy from strangers: Kids and consumer culture. Vancouver: New Star Books.
Giroux, Henry A. (2003). The abandoned generation: Democracy beyond the culture of fear. NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
Giroux, Henry A. (1999?) Animating Youth: The Disnification of Children’s Culture. Online at http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/courses/ed253a/Giroux/Giroux2.html
Grimes, Sara and Leslie Regan Shade. (2005). Neopian economics of play: Children’s cyberpets and online communities as immersive advertising in Neopets.com. International Journal of Media and Cultural Politics 1(2): 181-198.
Gruber, S., & Berry, J. (1993). Marketing to and through kids. New York: McGraw-Hill books.
Harris, Anita. (2004). Jamming girl culture: Young women and consumer citizenship, pp. 163-172 in All about the girl: Culture, power, and identity, ed. Anita Harris. NY: Routledge.
Jacobson, L. (2004). Raising consumers: Children and the American mass market in the early twentieth century. New York: Columbia University Press.
Jenkins, Henry, ed. (1998). The Children’s Culture Reader. NY: NYU Press.
John, D. R. (1999). Consumer socialization of children: A retrospective look at twenty-five years of research. Journal of Consumer Research, 26, 183-213.
Kapur, J. (2005). Coining for capital: Movies, marketing and the transformation of Childhood. Rutgers University Press.
Kenway, J. & Bullen, E. (2001). Consuming children: Education-entertainment-advertising. Philadelphia: Open University Press.
Klaffke, P. (2003). Spree: A cultural history of shopping. Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp Press.
Klein, N. (2000). No Logo. New York: Picador Press.
Kline, S. (1993). Out of the Garden: Toys, T.V. and children’s culture in the age of marketing. London: Verso.
LaFerle, C., Edwards, S. M., & Leu, W-N. (2000). Teens’ use of traditional media and the Internet. Journal of Advertising Research, 4 (3), 55-65.
Langer, B. (2005). Consuming anomie: Children and global commercial culture. Childhood, 12(2), 259-271.
Linn, S. (2004). Consuming kids: The hostile takeover of childhood. New York: New York Press.
Macklin, C. (1996). Preschoolers’ learning of brand names from visual cues. Journal of Consumer Research, 23, 251-262.
McNeal, J. U. (1999). The kids market: Myths and realities. Ithaca NY: Paramount Market Publishing.
Quart, A. (2003). Branded: The buying and selling of teenagers. New York: Perseus Publishing.
Ravitch, D. & Viteritti, J.P. (Ed.) (2003). Kid stuff: Marketing sex and violence to America’s children. Baltimore: The John Hopskins University Press.
Russell, R. (2005). Branding, bricolage: Gender, consumption and transition. Childhood, 12(2), 221-237.
Saunders, Eileen. (2006). Good kids/bad kids: What’s a culture to do?, pp. 77-94 in Mediascapes: New Patterns in Canadian communication, 2nd. Ed., edited Paul Attallah and Leslie Regan Shade. Toronto: Thomson Nelson.
Schor, J. B. (2005). Born to Buy. New York: Scribner.
Seiter, Ellen (1993). Sold separately : Children and parents in consumer culture. Piscataway, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Seiter, Ellen (2004). The Internet Playground: Children’s Access, Entertainment and Mis-Education. NY: Peter Lang.
Shade, Leslie Regan, Nikki Porter and Wendy Sanchez. (2005). ‘You can see anything on the internet, you can do anything on the internet’: Young Canadians talk about the internet. Canadian Journal of Communication 30(4).
Siegel, D. L., Coffey, T. J., & Livingston, G. (2001). The great tween buying machine: Marketing to today’s tweens Ithaca, NY: Paramount Market Publishing.
Steinberg, S.R. & Kincheloe, J.L. (Ed.) (1997) Kinder-Culture: The corporate construction of childhood. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Posted by shade at February 26, 2007 10:45 AM