2 resultados para festival of advertising festival
em Línguas
Resumo:
This article aims to contribute to the understanding of the reception of advertising to children in Brazilian families. The topic of children's advertising has gained importance in recent years because of the civil movements for regulation by-law of advertising to children in Brazil. In view of the various interests at stake, the matter has been the subject of discussion and controversy. Therefore the objective of this paper is to cooperate to the debate, in order to understand the reception of children's advertising in family dynamics. We chose here the focus in the perspective of mothers and fathers. Four semi-structured interviews for the mothers and fathers of children aged between six and 10 years, conducted in two schools in the Distrito Federal, were analyzed. The category ‘appraisal’ was considered for analysis of positions, behaviors and feelings present in the discourse of the parents. The reflections were guided on Critical Discourse Analysis and reveal that advertising to children has been responsible for a determinate disharmony in the family environment, while at the same time strengthen traditional roles of social actors.
Resumo:
This article presents reading strategies that seek to contribute to better understand the words and images used in digital advertising discourse of cosmetic antisignals intended in particular to female audiences. For this analysis, we start from the assumption that, if such products are sold, the language of advertising messages carefully prepares to persuade the female audience to a possible need to purchase. The development of reading strategies is supported by the Polyphonic Theory of the Utterance of Oswald Ducrot, so that these serve as input for similar analysis, covering other text types. It starts from the assumption that there is a common given in these ads: the advertised products are invested in a magical power, which suggests that can minimize or even eliminate the marks that the time printed on the faces of those who use the products.