
New Books Network Caroline Jack, "Business as Usual: How Sponsored Media Sold American Capitalism in the Twentieth Century" (U Chicago Press, 2024)
Nov 13, 2025
In this discussion, Caroline Jack, an associate professor at UC San Diego and author of "Business as Usual," explores how sponsored media has shaped American capitalism. She uncovers the subtle ways companies used public service announcements and educational films to promote a vision of free enterprise as patriotic. Jack highlights the tension between educational values and marketing, tracing promotional nationalism from WWI to modern advertising. She also shares examples of audience resistance to these campaigns, revealing the ongoing impacts of this media on public perception today.
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Ephemeral Media Reveal Imagined Economies
- Ephemeral sponsored media reveal how creators imagined a desirable world rather than just selling products.
- These throwaway artifacts show the romance of business and the stories that justified corporate persuasion.
Education And Selling Were Intentionally Blended
- Economic education blurred education and selling by treating appreciation for capitalism as proof of economic knowledge.
- Proponents equated critique with ignorance and framed persuasion as a form of public instruction.
1919 Government–Studio Films To 'Sell' America
- In 1919 the Wilson administration partnered with Famous Players–Lasky to make films called Your America to counter 'ultra-radical tendencies.'
- Officials framed film as a peacetime tool to 'win America for American ends.'






