In the early 1930s, the Bushells brand of tea faced a market dampened by the grim mood of the Great Depression. In response and in contrast to the images it had pursued just a few years earlier, Bushells integrated a discourse of judicious consumption into its advertising. Sensitive to the atmosphere of caution and restraint, yet also mindful of middle-class aspirations, the brand forged a unique point of difference that would survive the recession. Given tea’s popularity in Australia in this period, and the extent to which Bushells was associated with middle-class tastes, this was an innovative and effective strategy.10 page(s
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© 2016, © Emerald Group Publishing Limited. Purpose: This study aims to examine and contextualize th...
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Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Society, Culture, Media & Philosophy, Dept. of Media...
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In the early 1900s, Unilever’s entry into the Australian soap market had to employ a takeover strate...
During a period of seven years spanning much of the Great Depression, 1929 –36, Clary Hill & Co. int...
Gilman & Company was founded in New York in the 1850’s and began importing and distributing tea and ...
After the national election win of the Liberal National Coalition in March 1996, Australia experienc...
After the national election win of the Liberal National Coalition in March 1996, Australia experienc...
© 2016, © Emerald Group Publishing Limited. Purpose: This study aims to examine and contextualize th...
Before World War II, Australians followed British tradition and largely drank tea. When coffee chall...
Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Society, Culture, Media & Philosophy, Dept. of Media...
In 1928, Australia was, per capita, the world's leading tea-drinking nation. This began to change af...
Australians were the world's second highest consumers of tea per capita during the 1930s. After losi...
A Good Brew tells the story of three generations of tea and coffee trading family business H.A. Benn...
This study examines the unique publicity activities devised by the Tooth's brewery in Sydney during ...
History should prevent us from repeating the mistakes of the past. This article focuses on the analy...
Between 1880 and 1914, Victorians consumed almost a third of the tea imported into Australia and Mel...
This article uses the origin marking of tea as a case study to examine contemporary debates on imper...
In the early 1900s, Unilever’s entry into the Australian soap market had to employ a takeover strate...
During a period of seven years spanning much of the Great Depression, 1929 –36, Clary Hill & Co. int...
Gilman & Company was founded in New York in the 1850’s and began importing and distributing tea and ...