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If the world really is just one big global village, then the logo is its common language understood by - if not accessible to - everyone. In "No Logo", Klein undertakes a journey to the centre of a post-national planet. Starting with the brand's birth, as a means of bringing soul to mass marketing, she follows in the logo's wake and notes its increasing capacity for making the product subservient - a strategy reaching its apotheosis in brands such as Tommy Hilfiger, who actually produces nothing but lends his signature to a wardrobe of clothing statements made elsewhere. Beyond this she reaches her core argument - the now uneasy struggle between corporate power and anti-corporate activism - via sweatshop labour, submerged identity and subversive action.
HarperCollins Publishers (United Kingdom) | |
2001 | |
9780006530404 | |
Paperback - 400 Pages | |
10 illustrations |
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