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Prescription and Petrifaction: Proprietary Medicine, Health Marketing, and Misalliance

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Bernard Shaw and Modern Advertising

Part of the book series: Bernard Shaw and His Contemporaries ((BSC))

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Abstract

The author charts Shaw’s relationship to the proprietary medicine industry and its marketing practices, suggesting that the playwright was profoundly indebted for his professional success to the techniques through which these ersatz remedies were promoted (techniques he frequently criticized), arguing that his relationship with the industry was symbiotic rather than simply antagonistic. The author anchors his discussion with an interpretive analysis of Shaw’s comedy Misalliance (1909) that prominently features on its set a portable Turkish bath unit, one of the most heavily marketed home health-care products, evoking the ubiquitous image of the disembodied head atop the contraption from decades of periodical advertisements.

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Correspondence to Christopher Wixson .

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Wixson, C. (2018). Prescription and Petrifaction: Proprietary Medicine, Health Marketing, and Misalliance. In: Bernard Shaw and Modern Advertising. Bernard Shaw and His Contemporaries. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78628-5_2

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