
What Is Post-Branding?
Part design experiment, part critical theory, part how-to manual, What Is Post-Branding? offers a creative counter to brandingâs neoliberal orthodoxy. Brands arenât just intruding on culture, they are our culture: they are the sponsored mechanisms for constructing and manipulating meaning and human identity. But should we cede such a fundamental human need to the market? If not, why not, and is there an alternative? A compact pocketbook composed of four main sections, What Is Post Branding? is a work of âpractical theory.â The first section, âDIS-BRANDED,â consists of 20 short page-long chapters exposing the ideological underbelly and real-world impact of branding. The second, âMixed Messages,â is a provocative visual essay illuminating the textsâ main themes. The third section, âManual,â presents a framework for a critical alternative to corporate branding, humorously appropriating vintage instructional diagrams as a brand manual satire. This section also includes examples of contemporary projects that have implemented post-branding principles. The book concludes with âContext,â which features a conversation with cultural theorist Brian Holmes and a discussion with design historian Steven Heller.
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Description
Part design experiment, part critical theory, part how-to manual, What Is Post-Branding? offers a creative counter to brandingâs neoliberal orthodoxy. Brands arenât just intruding on culture, they are our culture: they are the sponsored mechanisms for constructing and manipulating meaning and human identity. But should we cede such a fundamental human need to the market? If not, why not, and is there an alternative? A compact pocketbook composed of four main sections, What Is Post Branding? is a work of âpractical theory.â The first section, âDIS-BRANDED,â consists of 20 short page-long chapters exposing the ideological underbelly and real-world impact of branding. The second, âMixed Messages,â is a provocative visual essay illuminating the textsâ main themes. The third section, âManual,â presents a framework for a critical alternative to corporate branding, humorously appropriating vintage instructional diagrams as a brand manual satire. This section also includes examples of contemporary projects that have implemented post-branding principles. The book concludes with âContext,â which features a conversation with cultural theorist Brian Holmes and a discussion with design historian Steven Heller.










