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Article
Mass Producing the Personal: The Greeting Card Industry’s Approach to Commercial Sentiment
Popular Communication (2008)
  • Emily West, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Abstract

The greeting card industry manages the challenge of mass-producing images and texts for use in interpersonal communication through both specific production techniques and narratives that “make sense” of this seemingly paradoxical task. The mass production of the personal is negotiated in the processes of writing sentiments and creating designs, as well as in identifying sending situations for cards. At Hallmark, the approach to creating emotional, relational communication for anonymous others is captured by the phrase “universal specificity,” which suggests that people’s emotions are essentially universal, and that the industry can meet the nation’s social expression needs by customizing these core insights. This view justifies the high level of concentration in this cultural industry. “Universal specificity” as a logic of cultural production conflicts with other, arguably more dominant theories of what constitutes authentic communication, in which emotional expression should be original, unique, and emanating from the speaker.

Keywords
  • Greeting Cards,
  • Cultural Production,
  • Authenticity,
  • Commercialism,
  • Emotion,
  • Cultural Industry
Publication Date
October, 2008
Publisher Statement
This is an electronic version of an article published in Popular Communication: The International Journal of Media and Culture, Volume 6, Number 4, October-December 2008, pp.231-247. Popular Communication is available online at: www.informaworld.com/index/904098338.pdf
Citation Information
Emily West. "Mass Producing the Personal: The Greeting Card Industry’s Approach to Commercial Sentiment" Popular Communication Vol. 6 Iss. 4 (2008)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/emily_west/4/