Egypt
Heritage branding - Cleopatra's cosmetics and Hammurabi's Heineken
EurekAlert
From at least Bass Ale’s red triangle—advertised as “the first registered trademark”—commodity brands have exerted a powerful hold over modern Western society. Marketers and critics alike have assumed that branding began in the West with the Industrial Revolution. But a pioneering new study in the February 2008 issue of Current Anthropology finds that attachment to brands far predates modern capitalism, and indeed modern Western society.
In “Prehistories of Commodity Branding,” author David Wengrow challenges the widespread assumption that branding did not become an important force in social and economic life until the Industrial Revolution. Wengrow presents compelling evidence that labels on ancient containers, which have long been assumed to be simple identifiers, as well as practices surrounding the production and distribution of commodities, actually functioned as branding strategies. Furthermore, these strategies have deep cultural origins and cognitive foundations, beginning in the civilizations of Egypt and Iraq thousands of years ago.
See the above page for more. Wengrow is a lecturer at UCL's Institute of Archaeology.
The abstract can be found on the Current Anthropology website, but you will need to pay/subscribe or have access via your institution to read the full article.
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Book Review: What Makes Civilization?
Aardvarchaeology (Martin Rundkvist) What Makes Civilization? David Wengrow Oxford University Press 2010 Reviewing David Wengrow's What Makes Civilization? is made difficult by the discrepancy between its title and its contents. Out of about 240 pp...
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New Book: What Makes Civilization
Oxford University Press What Makes Civilization? The Ancient Near East and the Future of the West David Wengrow Description Renowned archaeologist David Wengrow creates here a vivid new account of the "birth of civilization" in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia,...
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New Book: What Makes Civilization?
OUP Blog In What Makes Civilization?, archaeologist David Wengrow provides a vivid new account of the ‘birth of civilization’ in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia (today’s Iraq). These two regions, where many foundations of modern life were laid, are...
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Rosetta Online Journal - Issue 02 2007
http://www.rosetta.bham.ac.uk/Issue_02/Gregory.htm The Institute of Archaeology and Antiquity at the University of Birmingham released the second issue of the online journal "Rosetta" which covers a wide scope of archaeology, history and classics subjects....
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A Penn Treasure Plays Name That Tomb
http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/business/12352797.htmAn article about the task of re-branding the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. "Founded in 1887, the museum has about 175 full- and part-time employees and a $15.9...
Egypt