Publication: Representation of desire in advertising: a psychoanalytical critique of coca-cola
Abstract
In consumer cultures across the globe, the feeling of desire has been a crucial element in marketing
messages. Brands frequently use desire in their advertisements through the portrayals of sexuality and
the depictions of male and female bodies. In this regard, advertisements are structured like dreams or
fantasies that reflect the unconscious and repressed desires of consumers. Accordingly, this paper aims
to analyze the representation of desire in advertising through the discussion of a Coca-Cola
advertisement, “Asansör” (The Elevator), which was published on YouTube in 2017. As a part of the
brand’s global advertising campaign, the metaphor of an elevator was used frequently by Coca-Cola in
different cultural contexts. The Turkish version of the advertisement narrates the encounter between
Kıvanç Tatlıtuğ, a famous Turkish actor, and a female hotel worker, as they are trapped in the elevator.
This paper argues that the brand employs psychoanalytical narrative techniques to structure the
elevator as the unconscious, or, in Jacques Lacan’s terms, “the Real”, whereas the ordinary life outside
the elevator is characterized by “the Symbolic” as an outcome of social norms and conventions. CocaCola product signifies a fetish of desire that manages to go beyond the Symbolic order and make the
characters feel the intense and disturbing presence of the Real. In sum, by applying a psychoanalytic
methodology in the analysis of the text, this paper will explore the different unconscious structures
within the advertising narrative and discuss the representation of desire with reference to the
psychoanalytic theories of Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan.
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Citation
NAS A., \"Representation of Desire in Advertising: A Psychoanalytical Critique of Coca-Cola\", 6th Cultural Informatics, Communication & Media Studies Conference, İzmir, Türkiye, 26 Ekim 2022
