Diamonds: Cultural Representations and Transformations of a "Girl's Best Friend"

The great success of the advertising industry in the 1950s created a diamond culture where diamonds are continuously associated with images of love and devotion. With all of the diamond's positive associations, no one could have imagined that such a precious jewel could have negative connotatio...

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Main Author: Whiteley, Bryn Elizabeth
Other Authors: Science and Technology in Society
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71382
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-713822020-09-29T05:38:44Z Diamonds: Cultural Representations and Transformations of a "Girl's Best Friend" Whiteley, Bryn Elizabeth Science and Technology in Society Patzig, Eileen Crist Halfon, Saul E. Olson, Philip R. Heflin, Ashley Shew Zallen, Doris T. Diamonds Consumer Culture Philanthropic Consumption Lab-made The great success of the advertising industry in the 1950s created a diamond culture where diamonds are continuously associated with images of love and devotion. With all of the diamond's positive associations, no one could have imagined that such a precious jewel could have negative connotations. Yet in the 1990s, the label "blood diamond" emerged and became widely correlated with torture, rape, child labor, and environmental destruction. My three- manuscript dissertation covers the following topics: how diamond jewelry has become ingrained in American consumer culture, how lab-made diamond substitutes create new politics, and how diamonds created from ashes complicate consumers' relationship with diamond jewelry. These three manuscripts cover a series of interconnected ideas about symbolism and imagery of the diamond. In the first manuscript I present a history of how advertisements have influenced American consumer culture. The second manuscript elaborates on the themes established in the first manuscript by examining the political nature of lab-made diamonds in relation to American consumer culture. And finally, in the third manuscript the images presented in the first manuscript become even more complicated when the end product is literally made from ashes. Lab-made diamonds challenge traditional images of natural stones in a way that forces consumers to confront, and perhaps revise, the way they think about diamonds. Ph. D. 2016-06-20T17:53:50Z 2016-06-20T17:53:50Z 2016-06-19 Dissertation vt_gsexam:7704 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71382 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Diamonds
Consumer Culture
Philanthropic Consumption
Lab-made
spellingShingle Diamonds
Consumer Culture
Philanthropic Consumption
Lab-made
Whiteley, Bryn Elizabeth
Diamonds: Cultural Representations and Transformations of a "Girl's Best Friend"
description The great success of the advertising industry in the 1950s created a diamond culture where diamonds are continuously associated with images of love and devotion. With all of the diamond's positive associations, no one could have imagined that such a precious jewel could have negative connotations. Yet in the 1990s, the label "blood diamond" emerged and became widely correlated with torture, rape, child labor, and environmental destruction. My three- manuscript dissertation covers the following topics: how diamond jewelry has become ingrained in American consumer culture, how lab-made diamond substitutes create new politics, and how diamonds created from ashes complicate consumers' relationship with diamond jewelry. These three manuscripts cover a series of interconnected ideas about symbolism and imagery of the diamond. In the first manuscript I present a history of how advertisements have influenced American consumer culture. The second manuscript elaborates on the themes established in the first manuscript by examining the political nature of lab-made diamonds in relation to American consumer culture. And finally, in the third manuscript the images presented in the first manuscript become even more complicated when the end product is literally made from ashes. Lab-made diamonds challenge traditional images of natural stones in a way that forces consumers to confront, and perhaps revise, the way they think about diamonds. === Ph. D.
author2 Science and Technology in Society
author_facet Science and Technology in Society
Whiteley, Bryn Elizabeth
author Whiteley, Bryn Elizabeth
author_sort Whiteley, Bryn Elizabeth
title Diamonds: Cultural Representations and Transformations of a "Girl's Best Friend"
title_short Diamonds: Cultural Representations and Transformations of a "Girl's Best Friend"
title_full Diamonds: Cultural Representations and Transformations of a "Girl's Best Friend"
title_fullStr Diamonds: Cultural Representations and Transformations of a "Girl's Best Friend"
title_full_unstemmed Diamonds: Cultural Representations and Transformations of a "Girl's Best Friend"
title_sort diamonds: cultural representations and transformations of a "girl's best friend"
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71382
work_keys_str_mv AT whiteleybrynelizabeth diamondsculturalrepresentationsandtransformationsofagirlsbestfriend
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