CHANGES IN THE ADVERTISEMENT OF GOODS AND SERVICES IN THE LITHUANIAN PERIODIC PRESS DURING 1918–1940 Cover Image

PREKIŲ IR PASLAUGŲ PASIŪLOS KAITA LIETUVOS PERIODINĖS SPAUDOS REKLAMOJE 1918–1940 METAIS
CHANGES IN THE ADVERTISEMENT OF GOODS AND SERVICES IN THE LITHUANIAN PERIODIC PRESS DURING 1918–1940

Author(s): Giedrė Polkaitė
Subject(s): History
Published by: Vilniaus Universiteto Leidykla

Summary/Abstract: Advertising in interwar Lithuania functioned as a source of information about new goods and services and also strove to create new demand and to promote new life styles, fashions, and habits. The aim of this article is to investigate the availability of goods and services in Lithuanian advertising during 1918–1940, to create periods in the tendencies in the change in their availability, and to analyse the dominant groups of goods and services. After calculating the general average of the goods and services advertised in the dailies ‘Lietuva’, ‘Lietuvos Aidas’, and ‘Lietuvos Žinios’ during 1918–1940, it was discovered that the medical services and medicines group (18% of all the advertisements in ‘Lietuvos Aidas’ and ‘Lietuva’; 11% of those in ‘Lietuvos Žinios’), cosmetics and household chemicals (13% and 18% respectively), and publications, bookshops, and print shops (8% and 10% respectively) were advertised the most intensively. Agricultural supplies (18%), cosmetics and household chemicals (17%), publications, bookshops, and print shops (7%), and banks (7%) were advertised the most in the publications ‘Lietuvos Ūkininkas’ and ‘Ūkininko Patarėjas’. Alcoholic beverages were the least advertised in the studied publications. The greatest changes in the number of advertisements were observed in agricultural and industrial advertising as well as in the advertising for cosmetics and household chemicals. The intensity of the advertising for agricultural and industrial supplies fell from 13–14% during 1918–1922 to 0.3% in 1937 in the dailies ‘Lietuva’ and ‘Lietuvos aidas’. This type of advertising moved to specialised publications, in which no downtrend was observed: advertising for agricultural supplies comprised 16% of the entire number of the advertisements for goods and services in ‘Lietuvos Ūkininkas’ in 1919 and 13% in ‘Ūkininko Patarėjas’ in 1938. Meanwhile cosmetics advertising did not comprise even 0.5% of all the advertising during 1918–1919 but in the 1930s they became the most heavily advertised group of goods. This was caused by the establishment of local manufacturers in the market and the competition of their production. Not only did the intensity of cosmetics advertising increase but so did the supply of products and the circle of consumers. (cosmetics were targeted not only at women but also at men and children and an effort was made to attract rural buyers.) The advertisement of services, e.g. of physicians, various training courses, banks, tailors, cleaners, and hairdressers, occupied a solid (about 25–30%) percentage of the supply of advertising, especially during the first years of independence while manufacturing production was suspended due to the First World War and the young state’s political and economic instability. of the aforementioned areas, physicians advertised the most. (In 1928, the advertisement of medical services comprised as much as 32% of the advertising in ‘Lietuvos Aidas’.)

  • Issue Year: 2009
  • Issue No: 24
  • Page Range: 98-117
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: Lithuanian
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