Vance Oakley Packard (May 22, 1914 – December 12, 1996) was an American journalist and social critic. He was the author of several books, including The Hidden Persuaders and The Naked Society. He was a critic of consumerism.
Packard joined the Boston Daily Record as a staff reporter in 1937.[1] He became a reporter for the Associated Press around 1940, and in 1942, joined the staff of The American Magazine as a section editor, later becoming a staff writer.[1] That periodical closed in July, 1956, and Packard became a writer at Collier's. After its closing by the end of the year, he devoted his full attention to developing book-length projects of his own.[1] Halfway into the next year,[3] his The Hidden Persuaders was published to national attention, launching him into a career as a full-time social critic, lecturing and developing further books.[4] He was a critic of consumerism,[1] which he viewed as an attack on the traditional American way of life.[5]
In The Hidden Persuaders, first published in 1957, Packard explored advertisers' use of consumer motivational research and other psychological techniques, including depth psychology and subliminal tactics, to manipulate expectations and induce desire for products, particularly in the American postwar era. He identified eight "compelling needs" that advertisers promise products will fulfill (Emotional Security, Reassurance of worth, Ego gratification, Creative outlets, Love objects, Sense of power, Roots, Immortality).
According to Packard, these needs are so strong that people are compelled to buy products merely to satisfy those needs. The book also explores the manipulative techniques of promoting politicians to the electorate. Additionally, the book questions the morality of using these techniques.[9]
While the book was a top-seller among middle-class audiences, it was widely criticised by marketing researchers and advertising executives as carrying a sensationalist tone and containing unsubstantiated assertions[which?].[10]
In his 1964 book called The Naked Society, Packard criticized advertisers' unfettered use of private information to create marketing schemes. He compared a recent Great Society initiative by then-president Lyndon B. Johnson, the National Data Bank, to the use of information by advertisers and argued for increased data privacy measures to ensure that information did not find its way into the wrong hands. The essay led Congress to create the Special Subcommittee on the Invasion of Privacy and inspired privacy advocates such as Neil Gallagher and Sam Ervin to fight Johnson's flagrant disregard for consumer privacy.[11]
Personal life and death
Packard was married to Virginia Matthews; they had two sons and a daughter.[1] They resided in New Canaan, Connecticut and Martha's Vineyard.[1] He died in 1996 at the Martha's Vineyard Hospital.[12]
Publications
1946 How to Pick a Mate – a guide co-authored with the head of the Penn State marriage counseling service
1950 Animal IQ: The Human Side of Animals – a popular paperback on animal intelligence
1957 The Hidden Persuaders – on the advertising industry – the first of a popular series of books on sociology topics (ISBN0-671-53149-2)
1959 The Status Seekers – describing American social stratification and behavior
1960 Oh, Happy, Happy, Happy – foreword by Vance Packard, with Charles Saxon
1962 The Pyramid Climbers – describes the changing impact of American enterprise on managers, the structured lives of corporate executives and the conformity they need to advance in the hierarchy
1964 The Naked Society – on the threats to privacy posed by new technologies such as computerized filing, modern surveillance techniques and methods for influencing human behavior
1968 The Sexual Wilderness – on the sexual revolution of the 1960s and changes in male-female relationships
1972 A Nation of Strangers – about the attrition of communal structure through frequent geographical transfers of corporate executives
1977 The People Shapers – on the use of psychological & biological testing and experimentation to manipulate human behavior
1983 Our Endangered Children – discusses growing up in a changing world, warning that American preoccupation with money, power, status, and sex ignored the needs of future generations