Advertising, Marketing and ImageVisual Representations and School Modernity through Postcards (Spain, the Twentieth Century)

  1. Viñao, Antonio
  2. Martínez Ruiz-Funes, María José
Revue:
Sisyphus: Journal of Education

ISSN: 2182-9640

Année de publication: 2016

Titre de la publication: Educational Modernity: Representation and Writings

Volumen: 4

Número: 1

Pages: 42-66

Type: Article

DOI: 10.25749/SIS.10458 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openDialnet editor

D'autres publications dans: Sisyphus: Journal of Education

Objectifs de Développement Durable

Résumé

By the end of the nineteenth century picture postcards had become an advertising tool for businesses, and their importance would grow still more during the early decades of the twentieth century. Primary, secondary and professional schools of education (especially those of a religious nature) were also quick to make use of them, and state schools built at that time would, albeit somewhat later, follow suit. These postcards served as a “business” or “visiting cards” for these educational institutions, which used them to show families and the general public the image, and images, by which they wished to be known. This paper analyzes the general evolution in Spain of this modern type of advertising, which transmitted socio-cultural values and created school identities, while also looking at the different uses that were made of them, the norms followed and the diversity of images offered by some educational institutions.