Tupperware: The Promise of Plastic in 1950's America Buy on Amazon
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Tupperware: The Promise of Plastic in 1950's America

Publisher Smithsonian Books
Category History
14.37 16.95 -15% USD

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Book Details
Author(s) Alison J. Clarke
Publisher Smithsonian Books
ISBN / ASIN 1560989203
ISBN-13 9781560989202
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #937,578
Category History
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description
From Wonder Bowls to Ice-Tup molds to Party Susans, Tupperware has become an icon of suburban living. Tracing the fortunes of Earl Tupper's polyethylene containers from early design to global distribution, Alison J. Clarke explains how Tupperware tapped into potent commercial and social forces, becoming a prevailing symbol of late twentieth-century consumer culture.

Invented by Earl Tupper in the 1940s to promote thrift and cleanliness, the pastel plasticwares were touted as essential to a postwar lifestyle that emphasized casual entertaining and celebrated America's material abundance. By the mid-1950s the Tupperware party, which gathered women in a hostess's home for lively product demonstrations and sales, was the foundation of a multimillion-dollar business that proved as innovative as the containers themselves. Clarke shows how the “party plan” direct sales system, by creating a corporate culture based on women's domestic lives, played a greater role than patented seals and streamlined design in the success of Tupperware.
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