Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T02:26:01.490Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

WHO BELONGS TO THE ‘STAR PEOPLE’? NEGOTIATING BEER AND GIN ADVERTISEMENTS IN WEST AFRICA, 1949–75*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2012

DMITRI VAN DEN BERSSELAAR*
Affiliation:
University of Liverpool
*
Author's email: [email protected]

Abstract

This article explores the different trajectories of advertising for schnapps gin and beer in Ghana and Nigeria during the period of decolonisation and independence up to 1975. It analyses published newspaper advertisements alongside correspondence, advertising briefs, and market research reports found in business archives. Advertising that promoted a ‘modern’ life-style worked for beer, but not for gin. This study shows how advertisements became the product of negotiations between foreign companies, local businesses, and consumers. It provides insights into the development of advertising in West Africa, the differing ways in which African consumers attached meanings to specific commodities, and possibilities for the use of advertisements as sources for African history.

Type
The Political and Moral Economy of Leisure
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

I would like to acknowledge the support of the Department of History in the University of Liverpool, and of the IGK network, Work and Life-Cycle in Global Historical Perspective, at the Humboldt University, Berlin. I thank Diane Backhouse and Jeannette Strickland of Unilever PLC, as well as Ton Vermeulen and Wendy van Wijk of Lucas Bols BV, for all their help with the project. I benefited from comments and suggestions received when I presented this material at the ASAUK Conference in Preston, at the Keele University Modern History Seminar, and at the University of Birmingham's West Africa Seminar. I also thank Matthew Hilton and the journal's anonymous reviewers for their feedback on earlier drafts of this article.

References

1 Fieldhouse, D. K., Unilever Overseas: The Anatomy of a Multinational 1895–1975 (London, 1978), 349–50Google Scholar; R. Tigwell, ‘James Deemin and the organisation of West African trade – 1880 to 1915’ (unpublished M.Phil thesis, University of Liverpool, 1978), 298–9.

2 Pope, D., The Making of Modern Advertising (New York, 1983), 141–2Google Scholar.

3 Williamson, J., Decoding Advertisements: Ideology and Meaning in Advertising (London, 1978)Google Scholar; Goldman, R., Reading Ads Socially (London, 1992)Google Scholar; Schwarzkopf, S., ‘They do it with mirrors: advertising and British Cold War consumer politics’, Contemporary British History, 19:2 (2005), 137–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4 Jones, G., Multinationals and Global Capitalism from the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First Century (Oxford, 2005), 125–6Google Scholar; C. Ross, ‘Visions of prosperity: The americanisation of advertising in interwar Germany’, in P. E. Swett, S. J. Wiesen, and J. R. Zatlin (eds.), Selling Modernity: Advertising in Twentieth-Century Germany (Durham, 2007), 63; Anderson, M. H., Madison Avenue in Asia: Politics and Transnational Advertising (Cranbury, 1984), 88Google Scholar.

5 F. Mort, ‘The commercial domain: advertising and the cultural management of demand’, in B. Conekin, F. Mort, and C. Waters (eds.), Moments of Modernity: Reconstructing Britain 1945–1964 (London, 1999), 55–75; S. Nixon, ‘Apostles of Americanization? J. Walter Thompson Company Ltd, advertising and Anglo-American relations 1945–67’, Contemporary British History, 22:4 (2008), 489–92Google Scholar; Woodard, J. P., ‘Marketing modernity: the J. Walter Thompson Company and North American advertising in Brazil, 1929–1939’, Hispanic American Historical Review, 82:2 (2002), 257–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

6 Burke, T., ‘“Fork up and smile”: marketing, colonial knowledge and the female subject in Zimbabwe’, Gender and History, 8:3 (1996), 440–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

7 Burke, T., Lifebuoy Men, Lux Women: Commodification, Consumption, and Cleanliness in Modern Zimbabwe (London, 1996), 144–5Google Scholar.

8 Marcus, E., ‘Selling the tropical African market’, Journal of Marketing, 25:5 (1961), 27CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On the modernisation myth, see Ferguson, J., Expectations of Modernity: Myths and Meanings of Urban Life on the Zambian Copperbelt (Berkeley, 1999), 1317Google Scholar.

9 Baker, R. W., ‘Marketing in Nigeria’, Journal of Marketing, 29:3 (1965), 40–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

10 J. Roberts, ‘Michael Power and Guinness masculinity in Africa’, in S. Van Wolputte and M. Fumanti (eds.), Beer in Africa: Drinking Spaces, States and Selves (Münster, 2011), 35.

11 Compare for instance: Moreno, J., Yankee Don't Go Home! Mexican Nationalism, American Business Culture, and the Shaping of Modern Mexico, 1920–1950 (Chapel Hill, 2003)Google Scholar; R. Srivatsan, ‘The woman in the advertisement: historical explorations through a type’, in R. Fardon, W. van Binsbergen and R. van Dijk (eds.), Modernity on a Shoestring: Dimensions of Globalisation, Consumption, and Development in Africa and Beyond (London, 1999), 269–79; and Laird, P., Advertising Progress: American Business and the Rise of Consumer Marketing (Baltimore, 1998)Google Scholar.

12 Unilever Archives & Records Management, Port Sunlight, UK (UARM) United Africa Company Collection (UAC) 2/1/A/8/5/1, Nigerian Breweries Limited Star Advertising 1966; UARM UAC/2/1/A/7/2/6/1, Lintas W. A. Ltd Star Beer Advertising Brief 1965/66 May 1965.

13 The most comprehensive overview of UAC's activities is Fieldhouse, D. K., Merchant Capital and Economic Decolonization: The United Africa Company 1929–1987 (Oxford, 1994)Google Scholar.

14 Cooper, F., Decolonization and African Society: The Labor Question in French and British Africa (Cambridge, 1996), 458–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Falola, T. and Heaton, M. M., A History of Nigeria (Cambridge, 2008), 155CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Shain, R., ‘Roots in reverse: Cubanismo in twentieth-century Senegalese music’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 35:1 (2002), 93CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Friedman, J., ‘Consuming desires: strategies of selfhood and appropriation’, Cultural Anthropology, 6:2 (1991), 154–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

15 Fieldhouse, Merchant Capital, 411–27.

16 Decker, S., ‘Corporate legitimacy and advertising: British companies and the rhetoric of development in West Africa, 1950–1970’, Business History Review, 81:1 (2007), 5986CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

17 Omu, F. I. A., Press and Politics in Nigeria, 1880–1937 (Harlow, 1978), 56Google Scholar; UARM UAC 1/11/19/67, African press circulation figures 1961.

18 Colonial Office Annual Report on Nigeria for the Year 1946 (London, 1947), 80; Nigeria: Report for the Year 1954 (London, 1958), 188.

19 P. Jones, ‘The United Africa Company in the Gold Coast/Ghana 1920–1965’, (unpublished PhD thesis, School of Oriental and African Studies 1982), 139, 340.

20 UARM UAC 1/1/2/1/3/21, Board Committee Minutes, 6 Feb. 1968 and 23 Sept. 1968.

21 Interview with Jake Obetsebi Lamptey, Accra, 23 Sept. 2010.

22 UARM UAC 1/1/2/1/3/21, Board Committee Minutes, 27 July 1965.

23 UARM UAC 1/1/2/1/3/21, Board Committee Minutes, 11 Feb. 1969.

24 Ogunbiyi, Y., 60 Years of Winning with Nigeria: The History of Nigerian Breweries PLC 1946–2006 (Ibadan, 2007), 62–9Google Scholar; UARM UAC 2/1/B/7/2/6/1, Ghana marketing review.

25 Lynn, M., Commerce and Economic Change in West Africa: the Palm Oil Trade in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge, 1997), 56–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

26 Bersselaar, D. van den, The King of Drinks: Schnapps Gin from Modernity to Tradition (Leiden, 2007), 1943CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

27 Heap, S., ‘Before “Star”: the import substitution of Western-style alcohol in Nigeria, 1870–1970’, African Economic History, 24 (1996), 6989CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

28 Akyeampong, E., ‘What's in a drink? Class struggle, popular culture and the politics of akpeteshie (local gin) in Ghana, 1930–67’, Journal of African History, 37:2 (1996), 215–36CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Korieh, C. J., ‘Alcohol and empire: “illicit” gin prohibition and control in colonial Eastern Nigeria’, African Economic History, 31 (2003), 111–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Heap, S., ‘“Those that are cooking the gins”: the business of Ogogoro in Nigeria during the 1930s’, Contemporary Drug Problems, 35 (2008), 583Google Scholar.

29 British National Archives, Kew (BNA) CO 554/45, Minute by Comptroller of Customs, 5 May 1920.

30 Heap, ‘Before “Star”’, 80–2.

31 Akyeampong, E., Drink, Power, and Cultural Change: A Social History of Alcohol in Ghana, c. 1800 to Recent Times (Portsmouth, 1996), 143Google Scholar.

32 Fieldhouse, Merchant Capital, 382–90; Ogunbiyi, 60 Years of Winning, 46.

33 Heap, ‘Before “Star”’, 82–3.

34 Ogunbiyi, 60 Years of Winning, 49.

35 UARM UAC 2/1/B/7/2/6/1, Minutes of the second Annual Breweries’ Conference, Accra, 19 May 1965.

36 Fieldhouse, Merchant Capital, 404, 509.

37 Akyeampong, Drink, Power, and Cultural Change, 109–10; Heap, ‘Before “Star”’, 69–89.

38 E. Akyeampong, ‘Ahenfo Nsa (the ‘Drink of Kings’): Dutch schnapps and ritual in Ghanaian history’, in I. van Kessel (ed.), Merchants, Missionaries and Migrants: 300 Years of Dutch-Ghanaian Relations (Amsterdam, 2002), 58.

39 Sloot, H. van der, 150 Jaar Henkes. Enkele Aspecten van Anderhalve Eeuw Gedistilleerd-Industrie in Delfshaven en Omgeving (1975), 53–9Google Scholar.

40 Henkes Archive, Zoetermeer, the Netherlands (HA) Box 21/3-8, Plakboeken Advertenties Buitenland.

41 Cooper, F., Colonialism in Question: Theory, Knowledge, History (Berkeley, 2005), 113–49Google Scholar; Cole, C. M., ‘“This is actually a good interpretation of modern civilisation”: popular theatre and the social imaginary in Ghana, 1946–66’, Africa, 67:3 (1997), 363–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

42 UARM UAC 1/11/20/3, Guardbook UAC Ltd Advertising Material.

43 Marchand, R., Advertising the American Dream: Making Way for Modernity, 1920–1940 (Berkeley, 1985)Google Scholar.

44 Mort, ‘The commercial domain’, 63.

45 Lopes, T. Da Silva, ‘Brands and the evolution of multinationals in alcoholic beverages’, Business History, 44:3 (2002), 1617Google Scholar.

46 UARM UAC 2/1/A/7/2/6/1, Lintas W. A. Ltd Star Beer Advertising Brief, 1965/66 May 1965.

47 UARM UAC 2/1/A/7/2/6/1, Minutes of the Second Annual Breweries Conference, 19 May 1965.

48 UARM UAC/2/1/A/7/2/6/1 Lintas W. A. Ltd Star Beer Advertising Brief 1965/66.

49 For some of the background to this idea, see: Ferguson, Expectations of Modernity, 169.

50 Mager, A., ‘“One beer, one goal, one nation, one soul”: South African Breweries, heritage, masculinity and nationalism 1960–1999’, Past and Present, 188 (2005), 163–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

51 HA Box 21/3-8, Plakboeken Advertenties Buitenland.

52 UARM UAC 2/1/A/7/2/6/1, Minutes of the Second Annual Breweries Conference, 21 May 1965.

53 Interview with Ishmael Yamson, 20 Sept. 2010; interview with Jake Obetsebi Lamptey.

54 UARM UAC 2/1/A/7/2/6/1, Consumer Habit Survey Nigeria (RBL 823).

55 UARM UAC 2/1/A/7/2/6/1, Star Attitude Survey – Nigeria (RBL 1260).

56 UARM UAC 2/1/A/7/2/6/1, Lintas W. A. Ltd Star Beer Advertising Brief.

57 UARM UAC 2/1/A/8/5/1, Lintas E.A. S. Copy Strategy for Star Beer 1965.

58 UARM UAC 2/1/A/8/5/1, Lintas E.A. S. ‘Star’ Beer Creative Expression for 1966/7 Campaign.

59 UARM UAC 2/1/A/8/6/6, Lintas Nigeria Ltd Star Lager Beer Copy Strategy 1973.

60 UARM UAC 2/1/A/8/5/1, Nigerian Breweries Limited Star Advertising 1966.

61 UARM UAC 2/1/A/8/6/6, Lintas Nigeria Ltd Star Lager Beer Copy Strategy 1973.

62 Ibid. (emphasis in original).

63 Ogunbiyi, 60 Years of Winning, 57, 63.

64 BNA: CO 583/108, Clifford to Churchill, 11 Feb. 1922; CO 554/41, Minute by Colonial Secretary, 3 Mar. 1919; CO 96/685/2, Gordon Clark to A. J. Harding, 12 Mar. 1929.

65 It has not been possible to date the development of this brand. Materials relating to it were included in a box containing mainly correspondence on trademarks and labels from the 1920s and 1930s, but the ‘Paramount Chief Aromatic Schnapps’ material itself is not dated. HA Box 21/3-8.

66 HA Box 21/3-8, Plakboeken Advertenties Buitenland; Klaas Zaalberg (Agent for Africa for Bols Distilleries), personal communication, 17 Jan. 2007.

67 Van der Sloot, 150 Jaar Henkes, 53–9.

68 Van den Bersselaar, The King of Drinks, 227–30.

69 Ogunbiyi, 60 Years of Winning, 72–3.

70 Interview with Ishmael Yamson.

71 Interview with Jake Obetsebi Lamptey.