In Something from the Oven, Laura Shapiro explains that, after WWII, the U.S. government made a huge push to get women out of jobs and back into the kitchen. So much for Rosie the Riveter.
Part of the propaganda involved a return to time-consuming home cooked meals. But this propanganda was up against a contradictory need of food-related companies to market to the general public the advances they had made during the war in non-perishable and pre-cooked and packaged food. So, on the one hand, women were encouraged to spend all day on a roast and, on the other hand, they were encouraged to take advantage of new food technologies.
This ad, from the 1940s, incites women to take advantage of Campbell’s pre-made soup:
Text:
“WOULDN’T I BE SILLY TO MAKE IT MYSELF?”
“Go to all that bother.. when Campbell’s is so homey and nourishing? Not me!”
“When I was a little girl I remember we always made our own vegetable soup. Mother used to devote just hours to to it. But one day when she was rushed, she tried Campbell’s Vegetable Soup. My dad’s not so easy to please, but he ate a bowlful, and then another. Since the Mother has served Campbell’s… and Dad’s been as pleased as a kid!
“I’m married now myself and — well, we young-marrieds all feel that same way. I mean why bothe to make vegetable soup when Campbell’s Vegetable Soup is so wonderful — a grand-tasting beef stck and all those fifteen garden vegetables. Why, every time I serve it my husband says: ‘Gosh, daring, this is really swell!’ And what better music can a wife hear than that? Now I ask you!”
Ad via Found in Mom’s Basement.
Comments 7
Ryan — January 27, 2009
I'm playing through Fallout 3 right now. It takes place in an "alternate" reality. Specifically the world as it would have been if the bomb had dropped in the 50s and the post apocalypse was filled with kitschy 50s detritus.
The game is so full of satirical advertising and products that I was immediately reminded of it by this sort of bold faced sexist condescension. It's hard to believe that these ads are real sometimes.
It makes you wonder how we're being influenced and how backwards our ads will seem to my grandkids playing Fallout 10.
Jell-O To The Rescue! » Sociological Images — August 12, 2009
[...] a market for new food technologies (easy and instant foods that were developed for the war). This ad for Campbell’s soup describes the phenomenon in more [...]
Joshua — August 12, 2009
... it just makes me want to cry. "Stupid mom spent hours making vegetable soup from scratch, but I get it from a can aren't I smart!" Sixty years later, we've got the local foods movement and we're right back where mom started, only with diabetes and cancer and obesity. Yay. We win?
If only we'd known where industrial food production would take us. Somebody give a copy of Michael Pollan's "In Defense Of Food" to everybody in the 50's.
“Rhumba Aroma” and the Spoils of War » Sociological Images — September 25, 2009
[...] for their products that would allow them to continue to reap profits. We’ve posted below on this effort as related to food. The 1948 ad below, for a scent-reducing and slimming camisole, is a great example of this in [...]
Mark — May 30, 2023
Nice
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