Thin blue lines : product placement and the drama of pregnancy testing in British cinema and television
Olszynko-Gryn, Jesse (2017) Thin blue lines : product placement and the drama of pregnancy testing in British cinema and television. British Journal for the History of Science, 50 (3). pp. 495-520. ISSN 0007-0874 (https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007087417000619)
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Abstract
This article uses the case of pregnancy testing in Britain to investigate the process whereby new and often controversial reproductive technologies are made visible and normalized in mainstream entertainment media. It shows how in the 1980s and 1990s the then nascent product placement industry was instrumental in embedding pregnancy testing in British cinema and television's dramatic productions. In this period, the pregnancy-test close-up became a conventional trope and the thin blue lines associated with Unilever's Clearblue rose to prominence in mainstream consumer culture. This article investigates the aestheticization of pregnancy testing and shows how increasingly visible public concerns about ‘schoolgirl mums’, abortion and the biological clock, dramatized on the big and small screen, propelled the commercial rise of Clearblue. It argues that the Clearblue close-up ambiguously concealed as much as it revealed; abstraction, ambiguity and flexibility were its keys to success.
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Item type: Article ID code: 66783 Dates: DateEvent30 September 2017Published25 November 2016AcceptedSubjects: History General and Old World Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Humanities > History Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 01 Feb 2019 10:23 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 12:12 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/66783