Consumer Culture
The announcement of President John F. Kennedy’s intentions to put an American astronaut on the Moon in 1961 allowed businesses and agencies to capitalize on the fervor of the space race. Anti-Soviet rhetoric had been on the decline in general news outlets leading up to the launch of Sputnik and Kennedy’s speech renewed the sentiment that positive steps were being made to win the race of ideologies. However, the novelty of going to space won out in marketing in the 1960s as people were also interested in new technologies that were made possible through industrial advancements. The evolution of plastics, synthetic materials and transportation technologies propelled this transition forward for the consumer.[2]
[1] See Megan Prelinger, Another Science Fiction: Advertising the Space Race 1957-1962, (New York: Blast Books, 2010); and Branden Hookway, Cold War Hothouses: Inventing Postwar Culture, from Cockpit to Playboy, (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2004).
[2] Megan Prelinger, Another Science Fiction: Advertising the Space Race 1957-1962, (New York: Blast Books, 2010) 10-40, 10.